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samierecnnressrenennnnenneTI PPI 


eet 


Seeeseqgesseceaseeesreseese 
¢ New Orexmiand Theatre 
4 T urs, friday, Saturday 
$ “Rainbow On The River” 
. With Bobby Breen 

: Half Hour Bargain Ecah Night 

© 


Volume 26 


a SLOGAN: 3 An lndeswnel Mevopolis of tatuniees People Who Pull Together, 


THE REM Tier PVE 


THURSDAY,APRIL 8th 1937 


oe 


“Cap y Ricks Peturne’” 
Bow VeWade, Ruy Walther 


Number 19 


Coronation Day 
Depends on The 
Amount of Funds 


Cannot Complete Program Till 
All Funds Are In 


On Sing Passed 
Away Last Tuesday 


Was Pioseer Restaurant Prop 
Of This Town 

It was a great shock to the 

citizens of Reticliff to learn + 


Seed Grain Loans 
From Fedaral Govt. 


Will Grant ¢$8,950,000 To The 
Prairie Povinces 


Seed grain loans to a maxi- 


Investigation 
Shows Alberta is 


‘Wheat Prophesying | 


Has Been a Failure 


in Good Shape Frediction Made Years Ago Ar2 


Says Alberta Does Not Need 


Now All Wrong 
= 


S.C. Insurgents 
Moved to Oust 
Premier, Cabinet 


Speaker Rules That Motion Tr 


mum of $8,950,000 for farmer Financial Assistance Teictiy Cece ees eae 0 Tet Unconstitutional 
the sudden death of On Sint, in the prairie provinces will t« _— ist Sek ia piediebed tha. oe 
Very little progress has been »roprietor of the Club Cafe,w!o -varanteed by the Dominion The rerort from the Bank «=f - _ wean oe world faite In the local legislature yet 
made during the past week i. assed away Tuesday night at government under a bill of Cynada after investieating A ny a patio his elude terday a resolution was moved 
connectios with the arrvanming «+ 11 o'clock. which Finence Minieter Dun 5..+t9'¢ condition, was tabled tf lens on us ane pulation by S A G Barnes, 8 C membe° 
for the coronation celebratic: Dece»sed had only been ill for - ins wave notice in the house of 11. federal house yesterday. Pte ea ond < ate op ,. for Edmonton, and seconded by 
program to be arranged tor ne<i » few days suffering from @ conmons. Such loans ate divid- m,, report stated that Alherta thle veduati e wheat on \v J Lampley, S C member for 
month. severe ottack of heart trouble. ¢¢ ac follows: Alberta $1,600,009 : geet eye we River; ‘that this. assem- 


Although the several commi 
ttees ave making pplana tor t*> 
days program nothing definate 
can be arranged until the cash 
donations have been completed. 
The finance committee is anx 
ious to have all those who in- 
tend to contribute, tu do so as 
soon as possible. Any amount 
will be thankfully received. 
Their donations may be mad: 
to any member of the finance 
committee: Messrs J R MacKen 
zie, K Johnson, W Hill, Dy Wat! 


’ + at any of the stores in town 


wuere lists are available. 

As a large part of the funds 
will be used for the entertain- 
ment, refreshment, prizes an‘ 
svuveni. r medals for the school 
children, it is hoped the comni- 
\tee will not be disappointed in 
the carrving out of the propos+d 
plans. Any funds which mav 
be left over will be used for use 
ful purposes locally. 

Funds acknowledged last week 


On Sine was one of the pior 
cers of Redcliff, having arrived 
here shortly after the town was 
incorporated. He came here as 
& private cook for Mr Danils 
who was then Mayor of the 
toyn. Later he opened vp a res 
taurant and grocery store for 
himself and has conducted ic 
suceessfully ever since, 

Deceased was a real genttle 
mah and a good business man 
who kept his premises in a clear 
and tidy condition and was most 
ccorteous and 
his customers, 

Deceased was born in Canton, 
China, 67 ytars ago. He leavea 
a wife, a son and a daughter 
who still reside in Canton. 

On Ging will be greatly miss 
ed by his many staunch friends 
in Redcliff and district, 

ee 

Anup to date airport with 
hangars, meteoroligical and 
tadio stations etc is to be erect- 


accomodating — te 
eon 


Manitoba $750,000, Saskate- 
wan $6,600,000, The Tlons will 
be made by chartered banks and 
suaranteed by the prerinees, 


Conadion Alt Service 
Exoected by Sept. 


Predict Travel From Halifax to 
Vancouver in 21 Hours 


Trans-Cosoda vir service by 
rext September, linking Helifa. 
and Vancouver ona 21-hove 
schedule wifh ia six-cent-a-mi'e 
fare, was held out to the house 
of commons by Hon C D How, 
minister of transport. He seit 
Ater a 48-hour service London 
to Vancouver would be poscfh'e 

The minister sail nadian. 
vould be able to tray 1 + etween 
M-ntreal and Van.+:ver of 4 

6-hour schedule, leaving Mont- 
resl in the evening aad arriving 


does not require temporary fin- 
ancial assistance from, the Dam- 
inion government, 

The bank found “that Alber 
ta can maintain it government 
services on as favorable a basis 
es Manitoba oy Saskatchewan 
without receipt of additional 
assistance and we therefore see 
no reason for recoramending 
that temporary finanmal sid 
should be extended by ‘tne Dom- 
inion government, 

The bank inveestigated Alber 

a's financial porition at the re- 

vest of Premier Aberhart, 


Mrs West, who has been ii 
or the past few weeks, {fg now 
gradually improving, : 
. om 7 
Mr Newton of Portland, fs at 
present visiting hig daughter 
Mrs AR Ballantyne and = 
Ballantyre. i 


Ice on the river south of town 


other food. The year 1932 


saw the world glutteqd with 


wheat and prices at the lowest 
leval in recorded history. 

Then Hon J H Thomas, Lori 
Privy Ceal in the British gove'n 
ment ventured the prophesy 
that wheat prices would never 
touch $1.00 a bushel again, 

These illustrations show the 
iatility of prophesying when it 
comes to wheat. 

tight now the wheat picture 
‘s promising for wheat explo ~ 
ing nations. “Price are high and 
trade has been averaginy beter 
thas 50 million bushels a month 

The exports of Canadian 
wheat and wheat flour from 
August Ist, 1936 to Mareh 
1987 totalled 150,463,921 bugh- 
e's, an increase of 10 015,911 
bushels or 7.1 per cent over the 
the previous year. 

Adequate supplies of wheat 
oats and barley for seeding pur- 
poses are in storage in Alberta 


hiy do now declare all cabinet 
offices, including the office of 
the premier, vacant, and that 
we forthwith proceed to elect a 
premier and also the members 
of the cabinet by a majority 
‘ ote of this assembly.” 

The mover declared: “This 
government. has  admittediv 
heen unable to take the first 
steps to introduce the principles 
of Social Credit in Alberta.” 

After the motion was made 
Hon Peter Dawson, speaker of 
the House, ruled that the mo. 
tion will not be allowed in the 
order paper of the Legislative 
Assembly as he claimed it was 
unconstitutional, 

—- > 

Eight «steamships have been 
chartered to transport the Brit- 
inh contingent of 8,000 Boy 
Scouts and leaderes acros; thr 
Channel to the World Scout 
Jamgoree is Holland this yeas 


r the west coa.t at neon the : es t al a th : ~ = © 
Previous Donations ....$178.00 °4 in Lethbridge at! a cost of next day. cant of the ovina ea pean ania Took’ out for the big carnival 
Nr R Pederson... STE cade. ‘ Psy ee delivery wil be made,°, be Sel ls Brondvay.B 
Mrs R Pederson =» a4 Arihonadmaics to “the iam 6 farmers without delay, B:». “279 Abe@ Sane. 
Me, F Congraait 2s.” ta) Fe a gon Vv 2 + -s <3 Don't overlook the smoker te wo bant minister of agri:ul baking contest, good er 
Mr WH Nyssey .......: 41,99 "md Highways Act now compl «the Alhertn  swemnment’: he held in the Terion clunnoonis ture, stated today. der auspices of St Ambrose'S' W" 
Public School Fund ..... 5.09 Motorists who approach ear! reosperity certificate plan, lau) Friday night of this week, ¢ : g.heeion A. Watch for further partic: 
Teaching Staff... g.o9 other on the highways at night 104 in September, 1936, has good program has been arrarg- ulars. eee 
; ; to dim “ieir headlights wituin been abandored, provincial trea. ed *.1 the occasion. THE KING TO BROADCAST --— NS - 


195,09 
a + oe 

“Mutiny “on ea ” Budget ’ 
would bea good title of a play 
for Chag. Lauton to put on the 
scyeen/to draw a crowd in Alta 

f 

Mr Myron H Davis, of the 
Glass Fectory staff, was unite! 
inomarrisge last Saturday +o 
Miss Olive F Lund of Medicine 
Hat. The young couple will re- 
aide in Rotel 

> 

Rev HS Hamnett left ‘le-' 
Monday on a busines; tip to 
Winder Ont. where ne wil! 
spend a few weeks. Serv'ce 
will be conducted here by Canon 
Dyke Parker of Regina, 

. * . 

Report on Alberta’s financial 
rituation as seen by the Bank of 
Canada as a result of a survey 
og behalf of the Dominion Gov- 


* ernment will be ready for re 


lease, within 10 days or two 
weeks, it was stated by Graham 
Towers; governor of the Ban‘ 
of Canada. 
> * . 

Rev H V Ellison minister of 
Gordon Memorial commenced a 
series of sermong last Sundsy 


850 feet of one another. 


urer Low announced yesterday. 


= 


“Silent Barriers” is Splendid c anadian F ‘lm 


G Hens Barriers, the film epic 
of the construction of the | 


AFTER THE CORONATION 


—y 


The British Broadcasting Cor- 


poration announces the prime 
ministers of the Dominions will 


broadcast messages to the Em- 


pire after the King has spoke. 
following the co*onation. 
Majesty wil speak at 7:20 p m 
GMT (12:20 pm MST,) from 
a special microphone in Bucking 
ham Palace. It will be the fizst 


Social Credit members of the 
legislature last week-end approv 
‘d Premier Aberhart’s sugges- 
tion that the members pay 
should be increased to $2,000 a 
ear. . It is quite evident that 
the members are firm believers 


His that Albeta is living in the mid: 
et of plenty. 


A special Boy Scout and Girl 


(guide Thanksgiving Serice in 


cceasion on which a king has Westminister Abbey on the 
spoken hy radio to his subjects afternoon of Caturday May 22nd 


ad his coronation, 


NOTICE OF ciate diiiiaa 
OF ASSESSMENT ROLL 


will be attended by 6,000 poys 
and girls. 
ii.clude Scouts and Guides rom 
ever-seas, in London for the 


The gathering will 


Coronation, 


‘town of Redcliff 
Assessment R.1) 1957 


Notice is hereby given that 
the assessment roll of the Towa 
of Redcliff for the year 1937 hes 
been prepared and is now oper 
f-r inspection at the office of 
the secretary -treasurer from 
ten o'clock in the forenoon t 
four o’cleck in the afternoon or 
every day which is not 2 public 
holiday, except Saturday, and 
on that day from ten o'clock i 
the forenoon until two o'clock 


: “ 3 Canadian Pacific Railway, which | 4» the afternoon. and that any 
morning on the subject Ques hed its Empire premiere under on who desi to obrect to 
tions Men are Asking.” Such the patronage of Her Majesty Fereon Who Cesires to 00) . 


subjects as “Of what use is Re 
ligion” “Can we know God” 
‘Can we rely on belidf in ar 
after life and other vital ques- 


Queen Mary, and Mrs. Sian.ey 
Baldwin, in London recently, and 


its Canadian premiere in Mont- 


real, and which depicts one of the | 
most important chapters in the | 


history of the British Common, 


wealth ef Nations, will be shows | 


‘he entry of his name or that » 
any other person upon the said 
roll or to thé assessment of any 
property or to the assessed val- 


Plans to present a petition of 


non-confidence to Premier Wm. 
Aberhart appear to have collaps 
ed, it wag learned authoritative: 
ly. With but two signatures of 
house members attached spon 
sors of the petition were rep rt- 
‘d withdrawing it fry, cirew" ¢ 
tian 


_ 


Agents Fer 
National System 
of Baking 


We will carry a full line of 
National Bakery Cakes, 
Buns, Biscuits, Doughnuts 


wwe 


tions will be dealt with, in theatres from coast to coast historical value, as well aa oeing, ment ef the historic scene when Ue placed upon any property: 


, ; and Everything in Pastry 
see during the current month. The) first rate entertainment, The film,| Sir John MacDonald pledged the foust within thirty days aftr tn 
4 story, based on Alan Sull ivan's'a Gaymont British production, | support of his Government. to the i otice odge . 
FOR SALE—A numbey of good book “The Great Divide,” brings} was made at Revelstoke, B.C., and) coterprise. Left to right are _ the date of this ue . a fresh Every Day 
storm. windows, suitable f 1 back and vyitalizes the titanic ‘im the surrounding mounidin area.| shown George Stephen, William complaint in writing ‘with - the 


struggle with mature waged by It includes such great stars asi tes Horne, R, B, Angus, Sir John 
the giants of pioneer railroading Richard Arlen, Barry MacKay, MacDonald, T.G. Shaughnessy and 
in this country, and particularly) Antoinette Cellier, Lilli Palmer, | Dons aid Smith. Picture No 2 
in the seemingly impossible task and J. Farrél! MacDonald. In it shows one of the ‘ense moments 
of thrusting the road chrough the the men who would not acknow!-/ of the play an? is a scer> be- 
Rocky “‘ountain barrier. The cdg defort>--'n olay *belr martes. (weer Richard Arlen anu Lilli 
siory Ls @ Womeudous Capadiau The ley-cul shows @ de eeeol- Paes, : 


en 


gussing in verandahs or fo 
totbeds. Sizes 6x8 ft., with 
i2 panes of glass each = App!y 
at The Redeliff Hotel, 


Leave your orders early 
to avoid disappointment 


P. Campeau & Son 


secretary . treasurer. 
Dated this 8th day of April 1927 
F V Britt 
Secretary -Treasurer 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFY, ALBERTA 


Wil fad hr Fes | 


| Aviafion Official Sees Great Advance 
In "Plane Safety 

Advancement in aeronautical de- 

sign will make it possible by 1939 to 
operate transport planes throughout 
the year without a single fatality 
according to BE. R. Breech, chairman 
of the of North 

Aviation 

Mr his prediction 
before a group of airmen and execu- 

tives of transport lines and aircraft 

manufacturing companies at a lunch 
eon given in New York by the Ad- 
vertising Clib to honor 

Hughes, transcontinental speed ace 

Mr. Hughes, wealthy sportsman 

pilot, spanned the continent on Jan 

19 in 7 hours, 28 minutes and 25 
|} seconds. His average speed was 332 
miles an hour or 5% miles a minute. 

| He said that it would be a hard bat- 

tle with nature to accomplish greater 
speed. 

On this point Mr. Hughes finished 

his speech, which had to do mainly 
with technical and other difficulties 
in rapid flight. . 
| “| am glad Mr, Hughes deflated: 
| speed,” Mr. Breech said. “Ameri-| 
| cans expect the impossible, and usu- 
| ally get it. But I am glad he told 
“| about the difficulties so that the pub- 
lic won't expeet too much.” 

Mr. .Breech noted that designers 
were concentrating their efforts on 
comfort, safety and quiet, rather 
than apéeed. In thr designs for 1938, 
he said, “you will see comfort, not 
speed, representing the greatest ad- 
vancement.” Engineers also are plac- 
| ing great emphasis on the safety fac- 
| tor, he added. / 
| Captain E. V. Rickenbacker, 


board American 


Preech made 


Howard 


PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO 


____Alazards Of The High*vay 


war 

‘ ;: ace and general manager of Eastern 

sphiecea with residents elsewhere, the people of the prairie provinces | Air Lines, toll the g&thering it would 
je 


are ected to seasonal dangers resulting in loss of life and property, the | not be long before airlines gave pas- 
incidénce and severity of which could frequently be appreciably mitigated sengers “in ~ comfort what you 
with thg exercise of more care. | (Hughes) give them in speed.” Hé 


| the British legion last November at 


International Organization Of War) 
Veterans To Promote Peace 

The policy of the Canadian legion | 
of exerting every effort toward pro-| 
moting international harmony and) 
world peace was given a practical 
turn in the announcement by Brig. 
General Alex. Ross, Dominion preést- 
dent, of a committee appointed to in- 


quire | 


nto a new international organ- 
of war veterans 
formed for a like purpose 
This committee comprises 
Milton F. Gregg, V-C., Dominion hon. 
treasurer; J. R. Bowler, general sec- 
retary; Lt.-Col. R. de la B. Girouard,| 
and Captain W. W. Murray. Secre- 


} TRACTION TIRE 

tary is J. C. G. Herwig ~ aa eS y =A. FOR SNOW AND 
The organization whic as ae M ' iy UNIMPROVED 

tracted ; . = all 


the attention of the legion) } 
Sree 


ization recently 
j 


Major 


AS THE GREATEST 


is known as “the permanent inter-| 
national of ex-service| 
men.” At present it has representa-| 
tion from 14 countries, including 
former enemy nations as well as 
former allies. 

It was established at the behest of 


committee 


a conference in Rome. 


In Their Proper Setting 


Canadian Mounties. Will Be Seen On 
Horseback At Coronation | 


-cleaning 
positive traction. Don’t take chances 
The famous Royal “Canadian |- of getting stuck in soft roads. Put a 
Mounted Police are going back to| set of Ground Grip tires on your car or 
their mounts, At: least the 35 who) truck today. No increase in price. See 
will represent this branch of the Do- the local Firestone Dealer. 


minion’s law enforcement at the) Fi 


coronation of K'ng George will take | 


along their horses. | 
FOR CARS, TRUCKS AND TRACTORS 


It was on their horses and in their} 
scarlet tunics that the Mounted! 
Police became known the world over | 
for their efficiency, loyalty, bravery | 
and resourcefulness. It is only in| 
the movies that they so appear to-| 
diay. In real life as they go about 
their duties they travel in more, . 


modern fashion, by motor car, ‘ air-) Just Modern Version 
plane, motorcycle or in boats, Only) rr 


Art OF Water Divining 


Jn the winter months on account of severe climatic conditions on the | Said aviation to him now was “a 
praities, lives are lost and property destroyed by fire. With the advent of parade of youth and we old-timers, 
spring when the exigencies of work and a long pent-up desire for outdopr | feel obsolete.” 
pleasures beckon them ihto the open, people exchange the hazards of fire 
at home for the dangers of the highways and the byways. For six or neve | 
months after the spring thaw, one expects to read almost daily of automo+ 
bile crashes ,in which one or more lives are lost and others taken to hos- 
pital with broken bones, severe gashes and contusions and shattered nerves. | 
And yet nine times out of ten these catastrophes could have been} 
avoided with, the exercise of more care. 
Untjl quite recently it was thought that a very substantial proportion | 
of these accidents was due to defects in equipment, weak brakes, ineffective | 
lights;“tires in bad condition and the like. Recent analyses of causes of 
accident, as far as it is possible to determine causes, show, however, that “| 
surprisingly small percentage of accidents is caused by defective equip- 
ment, despite the number of decrepit vehicles on the road and thé neglect 
of many drivers to keep their cars and equipment in first class condition. | 
Experts have come to the conclusion as @ result of experieneé and com- 
pilation of available data, therefore. that the human clement is the greatest 


“ gingle factor in the appalling toil of life and limb on the highways and this 


can be translated into terms of carelessness or wilfulness. | 

In the latter category must be placed the driver who gets behitid the, 
wheel with liquor under his belt, the driver who insists on streaking across | 
the landscape, hel! bent for leather, in grim determination to beat his pre- | 
vious best, regardiess of road and traffic conditions and the driver who, 
crowds others perilously close to the ditch rather than keep his own side! 
pf the centre of the road. Perhaps to these should be added drivers with | 
glaring headlights who neglect the common courtesy of dimming their) 
lamps at the approach of oncoming cars in the opposite direction. 

In other words, it is the consensus of opinion of many authorities, that | 
& substantial proportion of the accidents which provide headlines for the. 
daily papers are due to failure to practise the golden rule: “Do unto others, 
as you would they should do unto you.” 

For such wilful disregard of the rights of other users of the common | 
thoroughfare penalties can scarcely be too severe or regulations too string- 
ent and greater recourse should be had to cancellation of licenses for 
offences subsequent to a first conviction. The slaughter of the innocents at 
the hands of offerders is too great to permit of leniency where wilfulness 
can be proved. 

Not the least dangerous of these wilful offences is the practice of 
“hogging the road” and not the least of these offenders is the driver of the 
big and heavily laden commercial truck who straddles the crown of the} 
road and refuses to yield an inch-to meeting and overtaking vehicles, Not | 
all drivers of these juggernauts, of course, are guilty of this offence, but | 
Buflicient complaints have been voiced against this. practice during the past | 
year or two, to establish evidence that too many truck drivers are using | 
the highway without discretion and without regard for the comfort and 
safety of automobile drivers. 

Governments can do much to reduce the risk of accident from this 
source by encouraging other drivers on the highway to report the license 
number of this class of offender and a series of reports against the same 
individual might well be taken as prima facie evidence of his guilt, which, 
no doubt, it would be 

Good citizens who themselves observe the decencies of the road and 

ractioe courtesy to others could do much to purge the highways of some of | 
its teprors if they would report all cases of palpably wilful actions in viola- 
tion of the rights of the motoring public. : | 

Hazards ef the highways would unquestionably be materially minimized | 


‘if motor clubs and kindred organizations. in co-operation with the govern | 


ment, would enroll their membership as amateur custodians of the laws of 
the road and if every right-minded user of the highway would constitute 
himself a patrol to safeguard the interests of himself and his fellow men | 
‘and their families. 


| Germany is importing more chem- 
icais than any other country 


Maturity and maximum strength 
is not attained py horses suitable for 
heavy harness until they reach the! 
age of 5 or 6 This horse is at its! 
best between the ages of 7 to 10. 


> 


| 
Steam can be produced at a depth | 
/ of 12,720 feet in the earth. 


Best for all your Baking 
PURITY FLOUR 


Cakes, Pastry and Bread 


}it has 


“once in a blue moon” are they seen 
on horseback. For the coronation, | 
| however, they are to have their) 


Sunspot Mysteries 


Scientists Hope To Ascertain More’ 
About Their Effects Before 
End Of The Vear 

Sunspots surpassing in size, num 
ber and violehce’ those of 1929, the 
summer’ when vynprecedented rains | 
flooded the western dust bowl, are 
predicted for this coming summer, 


tion will view the Mounties in their 
proper setting. This is as Canadians 
wish.—-8t. Thomas Times-Jourpal. 


SELECTED RECIPES 
PIRATE BARS 


| 


Executions In Ethiopia Have Their) Has Been Taken Up Enthusiasticaly 
Parallels In History By Army In India 


horses and those who see the corona-, 


The reports of mass executions 
| being carried out in Bthiopia as) 
| punishment upon a people who failed 
to submit themselves entirely to their 
| conquerors but who instead, among 
| other things threw a bomb that seri- 
ously injured a high officer, are but 
the modern version of an old story. 
Some interesting parallels are 


Already the spots, seen through ?4 Castetie 5 Ceahaes Wafers | found in the history of Julius Cae- 
the world’s largest telescope at Mt. 1% cup feet | Sars expeditions into the more 
Wilson, California, exceed the 1929 3 eggs well beaten /horthern portions of Europe, into 
average. They total now about a, 1% teaspoons baking powder | Gaul, the present France, and into | 
dozen daily, and bid fair to set a| + CUP chopped nut meats | the present Germany, previous to/ 

‘ cup brown sugar 


record for the present century. 

Tt is certain they will affect 
weather and radio directly, Further 
mystery of their indirect effects may 
be partly solved before the summer 
is over. 

Present spots lie in two broad 
bands across the sun's face, each 
corresponding roughly to the tem- | a 
perate zones of earth. Their sizes) gTEAMED BATTER PUDDING 
range from continents to black fields. 4 . 
larger than the whole earth. 2 tablespoons brown sugar 

The reason for their position is a 2 tablespoons Mazola 
mystery astronomers would like to! ¥ gad Coen Bent On 
fathom. Only during the “maximum > = g +e milk 
sunspot cycle,” as at, present, are! .% cup bread com spine 

“ " cu n's Corn re 
they seen in the “temperate” zones. 32 ros Samy oA ng wet 


In the “minimum ie ee there : 
are few, the spots ¢ in a belt] | 2 tonahenn , 


Crumble crackers fine and mix 
with salt and baking powder and add 
chopped pitted dates and nuts. Beat 


combine the two mixtures, mixing 
thoroughly. Turn into well buttered 
shallow pan. Bake in moderate oven 
(400 degrees F.) 20-25 minutes. 
in bars while warm. 
Preparation 12 minutes. 


near the sun's equator. % t cinnamon 
They are whirlwinds.. But. they) ‘% teas nutmeg 
whirl in the opposite direction now|,, Beat ¢gs until light; add sugar, 
4s 7s | rown Brand Corn Syrup 
from that of “minimum” spots, near and milk. Sift together flour, ne 


the equator, ; | Son's Corn Starch, baking powder, 
Their driving foree seems to be salt and spices. Gradually stir in 
electrical and magnetic. They are| the wet mixture and when well mixed 
: x |pour into a greased mould. The 
black because their light is ultra-/ jioyid should be tw6-thirds full. 
violet rays, which have far more Tightly adjust the cover and steam 
energy and destructive power on|for 1% hours. Serve hot with But- 
atoms than heat. | terscotch Sauce. 
They cause increased radio static, 


i 


BUTTERSCOTCH SAUCE 


and are accompanied, near~their) a. Sake manner that the Italian forces now 
edges, by bright flares of light, which | Pers oe brown sugar in Ethiopia are being attacked by 
cause shért-wave radio to fade for! 1, eup Crown Brand Corn Syrup | ‘tibesmen who have refused to sub- 
10 minutes to half an hour. Their} 2 tablespodns Benson's Corn mit to the regime—-Port Arthur 
| cycles affect weather and crops | | Starch News-Chronicle. 
| % cup water ae ae al 
acer — | 4% cup cream, or evaporated milk 
A Deadly Warplane | Ms teaspoon salt New Alfalfa Type 


Melt butter; add sugar and Crown 
: Brand Corn Syrup, stirring carefuliy 
Holland Has One That Carries 1,000 Uti mixture is caramelized. Mix 
Pounds Of Bombs | Benson's Corn Starch with water and 
The most deadly of warplanes will add to first mixture. Stir and cook 
be delivered shortly at Amsterdam, UBti thick and clear. Add cream 

Holland, for the Royal Dutch Air and seit. Serve with puddings 

2 ’ desserts. 
Force. It is said that it will change 

radically the aviation world’s ideas. 
It is called the Sythe and is the in-! 
vention of Anthony Fokker. 


Kept Their Promise 

Mrs. J. B. Curry, 90, has a new 
Look-| black dress. Back in 1867 Mrs. 
ing like a sharp ended winged *88'| Curry was the first customer in a 

two fuselages and , S8ITleS) newly opened department store in 
1,000 pounds of bombs. Instead of | 4 dalaide, Australia. The manage- 
fast fighters, with short ranges, sent | ment presented her with an outfit 
up at intervals to intercept a raid,| o¢ clothing and told her if she came 
squadrons of these machines a0 | pack when she was 90 they would 
patrol at varying heights. | give her another gown. They kept 

ae ee . | their promise. 


The size of the brain does 
prove the intelligence of a person, | It wasn't until he was sixty years 


according to Dr. Henry H. Donald- old that King Edward VII. (Geor; 

: ge 
son, of Philadelphia. The blood sup-| yyig grandfather) ascended the Bri- 
ply and composition of the brain! tian throne. : 
makes 4 man @ scholar or a maniac, 
he says. 
< 
= (fis +c 

Take care of your pennies and the a 
installment collector will take care 


of your dollars. 2195 


| the invasion of Britain. 
Following the battle of Uxello- 
dunum, in Gaul, Caesar caused 


| by cutting off their right hands. He 
x caused the slaughter of the 


After concluding a peace with 
Usipetes and Tencteri, he attacked 
them, while disarmed and killed 430,- 
000 women and children. ‘ 

During the ten years of the Ger- 
manic and Gallic wars, Caesar con- 
quered three hundred states, killed 
over a million men and women and 
sent another million into slavery. 

The invasion of Britain was some- 
thing of an interlude. In that island 
he did not slaughter on the same 
wholesale scale, for the early Britons 
had better opportunity and were 
more skilled in their ability to escape 
into the woods and wilds. 

The excuse given in most cases 
where unarmed men and womeri 
were maimed or slaughtered by the 
Roman legions was that, after peace 
had been concluded. on Caesar's 
terms, his forces were treacherously 
attacked, .in somewhat the same 


Plant Found In Turkey May Be Used 
/ In Arid Regions Of U.5. 

24 plant found in a stony goat pas- 
ture in northern Turkey gave indica- 
tions of supplying a new type of 
alfalfa for grazing and soil-holding 
| im the semi-arid regions of the west- 
lern United States. 

Federal plant experts said experi- 
ments had proved the plant, known 
as creeping alfalfa, would grow in 
the semi-arid Nebraska sand hills 
and was able to withstand close 

and drouth conditions be- 
cause of its strong root system. 

The creeping alfaifa does not grow 
high enough for mowing and so its 
use is limited to grazing, and pro- 
tection against soil erosion. 

The agriculture department is co- 


A Czecholovakia company has be- 


Steadily increasing interest in the 
art of water-divining in Aberdeen- 
shire, Banffshire and Kincardine has 
led to the formation of a North-East 
of Scotland group affiliated to the 
British Society of Dowsers. Enthusi- 
asts gathered at Syvie Castle, Aber- 
deenshire, on the invitation of Sir 
Tan and Lady Forbes, Leith, and 
took part in a series of tests. These 
include locating and ascertaining the 
depth of an underground stream and 
well; selecting @ bottle containing 
pure water from a collection of six 
bottles holding various liquids; 
identifying magnetized and non- 
magnetized steel; finding hidden 


the eggs and sugar together and thousands of prisoners to be maimed! coins of copper and silver, and locat- 
Cut| entire senate of Veneti, a tribe in{ Colonel Bell stated that the army 
1216 -bars.| what is now a part of Germany. 


ing the water pipe and electric cable 
which supply the castle. 


in India had taken up the art of 
dowsing with great enthusiasm. In 
a recent engagement on the North- 
West Frontier a dowser was able to 
find water in a valley where it had 
never been known to exist before.— 
London Times. Z 


New Imperial’ Policy 
Rt. Hon. Leopold Amery Says Eco- 
nomic Policy Must Be Developed 

Rt. Hon. Leopold Amery, former 
colonial secretary, In an address at 
Leicester urged an imperial economic 
policy be developed. 

Britain, he said, was easily cap- 
able of shouldering the cost of re- 
armament, "but I would say that in 
the long run, whatever our efforts, 
one small island on the northwest 
coast of Burope cannot sustain un- 
aided the defence of a world-wide 
trade and a world-wide empire. 

“We have got to bring anew world 
of empire into being to redress the 
balance of the old. Our policy from 
first to last must be an imperial 
policy. Our economic policy must be 
imperialist. At the moment of crisis 
our paths must not lie apart.” 


ARE YOU TROUBLED 
WITH NERVES? 


rested im 
day, and 


so that you're able to*withstand the 
trials and worries of the day; that 
helps you quickly to sleep at night, and 

yhole being with vibrant 


"4 THE REVIEW, 


REDCLIFF, 


ALBERTA - 


Many Young Canadian 
Pilots Are Now Serving On 
Royal Canadian Air Force 


Britain's preparedness program 
has led to an exodus of nearly 150 
pilots, holding civil flying licenses, 
f Canada to service on short ser- 
pape ment ak in the Royal Air 
Force, government officials said. 

It was emphasized the movement 
was not organized by government 
agencies but was voluntary on the 
part of the pilots who found the 
R.A.F. willing to accept their ser- 
vices. The pilots were generally 
young men attached to Canadian fly- 
ing ‘clubs. 

Commenting on Sir Philip Sas- 
soon's statement in the British House 
of Commons, inviting Canada to co-' 
operate in ,supplying pilots, defence 
department officials stated the gov-! 
ernment had done no recruiting for 
the R.A.F. so far. A few pilots from 
the Royal Canadian Air Force bad 
been sent to HEngland for special) 
courses of instruction. 

Officials refused to state whether 
any preparations were under way to 
send a number of R.C.A.F. pilots to 
England as suggested by Sir Philip. | 

At present there are 152 offic in 
the R.C.A.F. of which 128 are on Bhe 
general list and are active mb 
These pilots are scattered across the) 
Dominion at the various flying bases. 

Information concerning aircraft 
and pilots has been passed on to the 
British air ministry when requested, 
it was stated. It was also learned 
that a number of the civil 150 pilots 
now in England with the R.A.F. had 
been medically examined by the 
militia department here before they 
sailed. , conn 

During the past few years, a =“ 
pilots had left Canada to join the 
RAF. but the number increased 


| 


rapidiy” following Britain's decision |. 


to rearm and it has now nearly 
reached the 150 mark, 

Some months ago it was an- 
nounced there are several R.A.F. 
pilots in Canada taking special 
courses and one R.A.F, plane is being 
tested here for cold weather flying. | 
But the reciprocal exchange of pilots) 
between the two countries is not be- 
lieved to be large. 


Collecting Queer Things Is Becom- 
ing Quite A Hobby 

Collecting things, just as a small) 
boy accumulates stamps, butterflies’ 
or marbles only on & much grander | 
acale, is becoming an American na-_ 
tional pastime with many thousands 
of persons spending hours in search! 
of rare hitching posts, antique music | 
boxes, Indian arrow-heads and what) 
states the Christian Science 
Monitor. | 

The growth of collecting as a 
hobby is reported by Mr, O, C. Light-| 
ner, who for three years has publish- 
ed a magazine called “Hobbies.’ He) 
has observed as @m indication of this 
trend the springing up of hobby 
shops in many cities, little stores 


containing all kinds of queer things, | Put into the harbor of sound thoughts 


trom buttons to firearms, which may 
be snatched up as prizes by col- 
lectors. : ' ; 

Most collectors start in an ama- 
teurish way and develop into special- 
ists, said Mr. Lightner. Take the 
stamp collectors, for example, The 
experienced ones limit their field. A 
woman in New York collects only 
lavender stamps. A man sebenaier’ 
ig interested only in those bearing! 
the picture of Columbus. Others go) 
in for airmail stamps, for stamps | 
bearing pictures of ships, and so on. 

Stamp collectors form the largest) 
group, the hobby editor said. Next 
he placed the coin people or numis- 
matists. After them come the an- 
tigue fans, and then probably the! 
gatherers of Indian relics. | 

ae) se / 

Ruined Vegetables 

‘He wore plus-fours and carried a| 
large assortment of golf clubs. 

"Yes," he said to the girl in the 
train, “I've had an awful day. Rain-_ 
ed all the morning, and by lunch- 
time the greens were in a shocking 
state.” 


“Really?” said the girl. “We had 
asparagus, but that wasn't very 
good either.” | 


Coronation Fish 

Coronation fish in patriotic red, 
white and blue are a popular line in 
London shops just now. The fish, 
from South America, have red tails, 
white stomachs and brilliant blue 
backs. Zoologists have a word for 
the inch-long creatures “Neon 
Tatras” but to coronation-mad Lon- 
doners, that doesn’t mean a thing. 


Banker-*This is the tenth time! 
you have had ‘this note renewed. 

Poet—“¥-yes, sir! 1 feel that note 
is the only immortal thing 1 shall’ 
ever write!” | 


| terprise in the world fgr 


| selves in 
| young 


TANKER RAMMED RY LINER IN FOG 


| 


Developing Volcanic Ash 
—_— | 
New Industry For Saskatchewan) 
May Result From Research | 
Research on deposits of benotine | 
and volcanic ash in western Canada) 
may lead to their development for 
domestic usé, the Canadian Institute | 
of Mining and Metallurgy was told 
at its annual meeting in Montreal. 
Prof. W. G. Worcester of the Uni 
versity of Saskatchewan and the Na- 
tional-Research Council, has already | 


made progress in improving the) 
bleaching qualities of these clays of 
treating them with acid, it is re- 


ported. 

The clays are used in the oil and) 
lard industry for purifying and de-| 
colorizing oils, gasolines and fats.) 
Formerly Canadian manufacturers | 
depended on imported clays. 

Deposits of volcanic dust in Sas-| 
katchewan are already being used) 
for cleansing and scouring com-| 
pounds. 

New methods for extraction of 
metals from ores have been develop- 
ed due to the demands of industry 
for metals of the highest purity, ac- 
cording to a paper to be read by 
Prof. J. U. McEwan. 

Producers are meeting the de- ys 
mands for nearly 100 per cent. pure 
metals largely by electrolytic refin- 


| 
ing, the paper says. By this method) 


repairs. 


Rehes shee Costly = 


Rich patricians of ancient Rome 
planted fruit trees on the summits of 
high towers and housetops, thinking 
that this enabled them to live under 
|the protection of the gods who 
watched over orchards. 


being recovered. 
Canada has recently become an im- 
portant producer of pure cadmium, 
selenium and tellurium due to elec-| ~ 
trolytic refining. The metals | 
mained as impurities in 
methods of treating ores. sive As They Are Magnificent 
Radium produced in Canada is ex-| presses, gowns and robes for the 
ceptionally free from mesothorium) coronation service in Westminster 
and other impurities, Dr. G, G. con Abbey are as expensive as they are 
rence said in a paper prepared for| magnificent. A duchess may spend 
Salivery before the institute. $2,000 for the one outfit and it can 
. : only be worn for coronation cere- 
The Sea Of Life monies. 
_— A ress of the roness degree 
pee ba de, 
Is Well Applied To Our Journey} will have to pay more than $500 and 
Through This World the cost mounts as the owner scales 
The person who first used the term the social ladder. Nor do these fig- 
“the sea of life’ drew a most apt| “res include such extras as jewels 
metaphor. From the time a person! and as these include tiaras, neck- 
is rocked in the cradje of sound sleep| !aces, clips, booches and pins, they 
until a half dozen of his friends my ay a tidy ae ka 
“blow the man down” six feet under for the eress mu: oO! 
the earth, there is et taiaee in his| Crimson velvet or of purple velvet if 
life that smacks of the mighty deep.| *e wearers are Yd soa — — 
The stage of infant squalls over,| ©COUrt gowns w 
the little clipper gets bis sea legs| White, cream, gold or silver’ How- 
a fl him and prepares to learn to ag Send — pestegatnees 4 a 
is own particular little fleet » the good 
through the years, If he held a re-| ™achine-woven velvet, which is con- 
view he would probably discover. his | Siderably cheaper, and rabbit not in- 
arinada contains the 8.8. Friendship, frequently passes A re, : 
the flagship that leads him, safe): The robe consists o! ree separate 
through calm or stormy water; red parts, the velvet kirtle or gown, 
S.S. Hardship that tags along in| pening in front to show a court 
spite of his best efforts to tle | dress beneath, the train also of vel- 
her; the 8.8. Ownership that 4s his| vet falling from the . shoulders, and 
pride and joy not’ to mention the | over that a short ermine cape. A 
Se Sy ne at ie as ak ae Ok ee 
And if the little skipper learns to a , c 
te her robe has a longer train and @ 
he will avoid the gales that satan wider ermine trimming. 
his passage to Eternity Landing : 
hazardous. -- St. Thomas Times- 
Journal 
Work To Be Done 
Training Young People To Take Sere 
caro breer:gilbe-arad In the middle ages, Italy was the 
te Ose ‘e faben ‘Brom Shin- | greatest resort for students desiring 
ing Lines, Linotype News: One higher éducation, 
large Caffornia employer told Jack 
Dionne, the Texas lumber publisher, | 
about his inability to get satisfactory | 
help. “The trouble’, he said, “is/ 


that for five years we have all been 
wor with skeleton organiza- 
tions, and we haye not been building | 
men to fit our needs. We must start | 
all over again, building men.” | 

Every employer should keep before | 
him that oft-quoted sentehce from | 
Emerson's essays: “The greatést en-| 
splendor, 
for extent, is the upbuilding of a 
man.” All of us must interest our- 
the proper training of | 
people who will take the) 
places of those who are running) 
things to-day. 


i) 


A 175- year-old grandfather's 
clock made in London and going 
strong and correct has been present- 
ed to the New York Academy of 
Medicine, with a $500 trust fund to 
keep it wound and in repair 


The gorilla beats his breast as an 
outlet for a superabundance of 


energy and docs it during all his design and fashionably full sleeves, is a charmer, and no end | 
Presto!~the new Tyrolean effect. As a 
bul Worn pa oon a Re ad 
4 aX. aa? pee WS See | 


angry. 
- : : ing plain knitted skirt, 

A writer declares that the future: 
of middie;class family life is in the | used; material requirements. 
hands of doniestic servants. They) 


E., Winnipeg. 
drop. . 


This dramatic photograph of the stricken tanker, Frank H. Buck, was 
taken a few moments after she had been rammed in a fog off San Fran- 
cisco by the liner President Coolidge. Although the tanker was badly dam- | 
valuable new metai by-products are | “ged it remained afloat and was towed to port after its crew of 36 had been 
}saved, The liner, carrying 1,200 passengers, was forced to turn back for 


oo Costumes For Coronation As Expen- People Who 


Hearts Are Trumps In Jiffy Knit 


PATTERN 5812 as 
Like to be “Queen of Hearts"? This amusing blouse af all-over heart |* 


is blouse is * 
instructions for making the 
in size 16 to 18 and 86 to 40; an Mlustration of it and of the stitches Stop where you were getting off, has’ 
To obtain this pattern send 20 cents in stam 
will probably let the whole th rs Household Arts Dept. Winnipeg Newspaper 
4 2195 


There is no Alice Brooks pattern book published 


Oat Varieties 


|New Highly Rust Resistant Oat 

Produced At Dominion Labor | 

atory At Winnipeg 

In Western Canada Victory and 
Banner have long been the laadinng 
oat varicties, & position they still 
hold. The need, however, for earlier) 
maturing varieties as well as rust) 
resistant types has resulted during 
the past few years in the appearance 
of several new introductions The 
more important of the early matur 
ing varieties are Gopher, White 
Crosse and Legacy 
|. Of the three, Gopher is perhaps) 
the most widely adapted. Compared 
with Victory or Banner it is seven 


| to ten days earlier maturing, pos-) 


sesses a stiffer but shorter straw and! 


yields slightly less The bushel! 
weight is high and the quality ex 
cellent. Gopher is recommended. as) 


an early oat in all three prairie prov-) 
inces, 

White Cross, which originated at 
the Wisconsin Agricultural Expert-| 
ment Station, matures only a day or 
two later than Gopher. This variety 
has fair yielding capacity but may) 
be criticized for its slimness of ker-| 
nel and low bushel weight. It has) 
given. its best performance in north-| 


j 


ern Alberta. | 
Legacy was developed at the Cen-| 
tral Experimental Farm, . Ottawa, 


}and matures midway between Vic- 
tory and Gopher, It appears to be 
adapted mainly to central parts of) 
Alberta and Saskatchewan where It) 
| produces a high yield of somewhat 
Formerly Watched slender grains of good quality. At 
Games Pnjoy Playing Them the Brandon Experimental Farm, 
We note in an Ontario paper some| Legacy outyields Gopher but is In-| 
discussion about a plan for a profes-| ferior to the latter in bushel weight, 
sional baseball league to include| Anthony, a recent introduction | 
cities from 15,000 to 50,000, but the|/ from Minnesota, is popular in parts 
writer was somewhat skeptical about| of Manitoba on account of its re- 
attendance at the games. sistance to stem rust. It resembles 
As a matter of fact, attendance at| Victory very closely in earliness of | 
baseball and seccer games in many maturity, straw strength and kernel 
cities has fallen greatly in the past characters, Anthony yields some- 
few years, for the very simple rea-| what less than Banner or Victory un-| 
son that the people who used to at hand drought conditions and distinctly | 
and sit-in the bleachers are now better in rust years. | 
chasing a golf ball, swimming in one 
of the hundreds of public swimming of 
pools or otherwise playing instead of 


Have Become Players 


Two other rust resistant varieties | 
American origin, Minrus- and) 
Rusota, have been tested at Bran-| when a market for the oil was found 


Future Of Great Northern 
| Areas Of Canada Lies In 


Development Of Minerals 


Stretching from Hudson Bay on 
the east to Alaska on the west, and 
from the northern boundaries of the 
province of Manttoba, Saskatchewan 
Alberta and British Columbia to the 
North Pole, the Northwest Terr 
tories occupy 1,500,000 square miles 
or more than two-fifths of the area 
of the Dominion. Although about 
one-third the area of Burope, the 
population is only 15,000, including 
Indians and Eskimos, 


In spite of the 
the Territories 


northern latitude 
are not a region of 
and snow as many be- 
Although the winters are long 
and cold the temperatures are quite 
high in summer The long days of 
sunlight promote rapid growth of 
vegetation, so that in some places 
grains and vegetables aré grown for 
local consumption even as far north 
as the Arctic Circle. The so-called 
barren yield a profusion of 
wild flowers and mosses, The north- 


perpetual ice 


lieve 


lands 


j} ern limit of timber growth rune in a 


aweeping diagonal line from the 
mouth of the Mackenzie River to 
Churchill on Hudson Bay, and timber 
suitable for mining purposes is cut 
on the shores of Great Bear Lake. 
Since the seventeenth century the 
Northwest Territories have been an 


important producer of furs and since | 


1922 have yielded oa fur harvest 
valued at more than $27,000,000. 
Notwithstanding the importance of 
the fur industry to the economic life 
of the Territories, recent events 
have shown that the future of this 
great northern area lies in the de- 
velopment of its mineral resources, 
Attention wha first drawn to the 
mineral resources of the Canadian 
North by the gold strike on the 
Klondike River in the Yukon in 1896, 
and since then the Yukon has pro- 
duced gold to the value of more than 
$192,000,000. J 

In the Northwest Territories the 
most important mineral development 
prior to 1930 was the bringing into 
production of two oi) wells on the 
Mackenzie River 42 miles below 
Norman, and about 875 miles north 
from Edmonton, The discovery at- 
tracted considerable attention, but 
the wells remained capped until 1932, 


watching’ othe®® play; If is said that |'don. Roth have proved to be of poor! in the Great Bear Lake mining field, 


one of the reasons that hockey quality, particularly the 
crowds at Montreal are somewhat! which possesses objectionable yellow) 
disappointing this year is because so | kernejs. 
many people have taken up ski-ing | Vanguard isa new highly rust re-| 
and tobogganing. . | sistant oat produced at the Dominion | 
It’s a healthy sign when people! Rust Laboratory, Winnipeg, and | 
would ‘rather play and exert them- shortly to be released for distribu- 
selves than to be content to sit in| tion, Results from recent co-opera-| 
the bleachers and watch others play. tive tests show it to be two days 
~ Lethbridge Herald. ‘earlier maturing than Banner, stiffer’ 
—- ee | strawed and approximately equal’ in 
A Trick In Figures | bushel weight and yielding capacity. 
Multiply your age by two and add The quality of grain is very eatio-| 
five to the result, | factory, ' 
Multiply by 50. i . i 
Add the change in your pocket, if) The Melntosh Red’ | 
less than a dollar. ; . : 
Subtract the number of days in Pamous Variety Of Apples Had Ite! 
this year, 365, Origin In Kastern Canada| 
Add 115 for good measure. | 
The two left hand figures will certain John McIntosh, who came to 
show your age. * | Canada in 1801, bought a farm close 
The two right hand figures will to the St. Lawrence in the country 
show the change in your pocket. | of Dundas which he subsequently ex- 
: — ~ ‘changed for the west half of lot No. 
A doctor at Munich, who has been 9 in the .fifth concession of Matilda, 
collecting transportation tickets for where he built a shack to which he 
years and now has 40,000 specimens moved his family. . 
from 100 countries, claims he has) 
the best collection in Europe. | 


While he was. making a clearance 
(on his new property, he discovered a 
|few wild apple trees whigh were 
| spared the axe. One of them was 
carefully tended by his son, Allen, | 

' |who propagated and developed the) 
| species since known:as the McIntosh | 
|and established a nursery at Dun- 
| dela which served-“as a centre for| 
} Mcintosh cyiture. 

The McIntosh Red is now, of 
course, widely disseminated. It Is) 
| still grown considerably in its native 
| soil ef Eastern Ontario, but in even} 
; greater numbers on the Pacific coast | 
of both Canada and the United 
States, whence it is shipped to con-/ 

| tribute to the food supply of more) 

| than one ocntinent.-Brockville Re-) 

/corder and Times. 


Nothing To Worry About 

The conductor of a very slow Eng 
| lish train hurried along the platform 
| and opened the door of a compart- 
| ment eceupied by an elderly gentle- 
| man. 
| “Pardon me, sir,” he said, “but 
I've got some véry bad news for| 

“Oh,” exclaimed the passenger.| 
“What's happened?” | 

The conductor looked agitated. 

“Well, sir,” he said, “we've just had 
news to the effect that Dishville, the 


' been burned td the ground.” 
or coin (coin preferred)| That's all right,” retumed the| 
inion, 376 McDermot Ave. | passenger; “they will have rebuilt it 
| by the time this train gets there." | 


former where pitchblende 


\the headmaster, used bad 


deposits, from 
which radium is obtained, were dis- 
covered in 1930, The Great Bear 
Lake development has been of im- 
portance not only because of the 
radium silver deposits, but because 
of the inspiration it has given to 
prospecting and mining in the Terrt- 
tories by calling attention to the fact 
that’ large scale operations are’ pos- 
sible in a region that, prior to 1930, 
was doubtfully regarded as a profit- 
able mineral country because of 
problems of distance and communi- 
cation. r 

Following the discovery of the 
Great Bear mining field, free gold 
was found near the mouth of the 
Yellowknife River in 1934... A hum- 


The facts of the case are that a ber of other promising discoveries 
have been made, including those at — 


Outpost Islands in Great Slave Lake 
in 1935, and at Golden Lake in 1938. 
Nickel and lead zinc deposits have 
been found also, and some develop- 
ment work has been carried out. Lig- 
nite coal has been discovered in sev- 
eral places. 


Revived Old Law 
Father Warned Against Interference 
» Under Act Of 1366 


A boy who snowballed his 
master at Grimsby, England, 


head- 
inad- 


vertently “brought to life’ a statute * 


of Edward III, enacted in 1366 

After the snowballing, incident the 
boy was sent to his room by the 
headmaster, Instead he went home 
..» and returned with his father. 

Father, it was alleged, shouted at 
language 
and invited him to join in a fight in 
the school yard. 

Father was summoned under the 
1366 act for conduct likely to cause 
a breach of the peace. The case was 
dismissed, but father was warned 
not to interfere with school duties 


They sat in silence for some time. 
‘Of what are you thinking,” he fin- 
ally asked 

She blushed and figeted uneasily in 
her chair for a minute. “Never 
mind!" she replied. “It's your busi- 
ness to propose; not mine.” 


A new umbrella is filted with a 
small window so that the user can 
see where he is going. Or whether 
the owner is coming. 


To show how pleased he js to see 
you, the Chinest 
hands. ~ 


shakes his 


vWe 


Shackle: 


Sk 


THE REDOLIFY REVIEW THURSDAY,APRIL Sth 1937 


The Redcliff Review SN ee | 


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Gentlemen: . I enclose §............. Please send me the 
mageiens checked with a year’s subscription to your 


—— 


Det Flches-and Palle Gof? Anderson’s Service Station 422s. Ry. st Uidoiias da Ghaitacaheneanens 
Asescoiate Dealer - «© Bi _ & STREET OR RR. ......:.ccsvccveccesseresesseveeesecers 
Elete Barber Shop NEW WILLARD eunvion eTAaTiON, 916 Deadbeat 0 Ol gown an onowane ...... 6s ce : 
210 8 Ry. St. Medicine Hat | Sa SOREN R EES SO ONO ARETE z 


Bring your Rolls of Straight 
Razors here to be honed 


Rooms 


Leave} Your Order for 


We now have « maine tor| hala figs Yale C Check Books 
eT andar tana te] Segue baths. Simpl, ey ounter Check Boo 
Filk Stockings t. make them 5,000 dealers to serve you. 


at THE REVIEW OFFICE 


Gypsum. Lime and Alabastine. 
rble. Apply « Canada, Limited 


—— ALABASTINE Ean RO SNC Re aN er tence 
| Used Barbed THE NATIONAL — COATING : . . 
Wire For Sale Get Your Job Printing 


Highest Market Price aye 7 [eth ~ At The Review Office: 
For Scrap Metal MODERN i S17, = 1 nae 
such as aay ~ No Job Too Big nor None Too Small 
for us to handle 


Aluminum, Brass, Copper, 
: Lead and all Car Radiators 
Also carry a Large Stock of 
Car Accessories 


‘Alberta Junk And ENVELOPES 
Auto Wreckers aces:  Q\LBTTERHBADB | seceeesenoocmes 
NOTE HEADS 


822 8. Ry. &t., Medicine Hat 2. 


=| the Gus City Plening Mil, Med. Hat |B L°8%® YOUT ira = 


eoecccccccoscscooooocsose Orders Here CIRCULARS 


SOOOSHHSSHSHSOSSOHOHOOSHSHEHOSHHOCEEOOD 


Dry Cleanin ie , BOOKLETS : 
Done’ in T s : : For The PRIZE LISTS Satisfaction 
nein Town | ~—s Dry Cleaning ae 
Get You Old Clashes ; Following VISITING CARDS Guaranteed 
aoe = . py Gf Suits, Coats and Dresses a and Prices 
ress 4 RULED FORMS 
wma He A a. sae Beall 
For $1.25 Leave orders with J. Bergeron, for ity 
Goods Called For and Deliverea Alberta Electric Cleaners and Dyers AUCTION BILLS 
VE US 4 TRIAL Je are the only Dyers in the Hat. us for Spring Colors 
LEUNG BROS le oe Let the People Know what you have to sell, by 
a ee , ADVERTISING IN THE REVIEW 


feeeereee oe seseeeeeeoess 


. There are few people who do not 
admire a group of well grown shrubs. 
Many people, in fact, carry in their 
minds a picture of some such suit- 
‘ably placed group of flowering 
shrubs. Experience has shown that 
in spite of the adverse seasons, orna- 


kk 
re lds dc dc 


<< 


WORLD SHIPPING JUNE 1936 


BR Givisisisiictcicicicicec 


POSITION IN THE WORLD OF SHIPPING 


Modern Women Seem To Have For- 
{ gotten How To Faint 
A head waiter in New York has 
been deploring the lessening use of! 
the potato. It is a splendid vegetable, By Tourists 
and should contribute to the best of! Being mountainous, Scotland has 
meals, but since women have been "°t ™any canals. There are, in fact 
trying ‘thelr best fo be and remain! MY three, but two of these are well 
slim they have shunned the potato worth the attention of any tourist 
because it is rich in starch. The) The itmpid Crinan Canal, but nine 
head waiter was surprised to see) Miles long, goes from Loch Gilp, in 
| the Firth of Clyde to Loch Crinan 


Two Of Them Should Not Be Missed 


how well women are in view of the 


mental shrubbery can be made to fill 
& great need in prairie home beau- 
tification. However, care must be 
exercised in the choice of kinds and/ 
varieties which have demonstrated) 
their adaptability. 

The testing of shrubs for their) 
hardiness and general suitability for | 
prairie planting has become an .im- 
portant part of the horticulural work | 
at the Dominion Experimental Sta-| 
tion at Swift Current. In common, 
with most other classes of horticul- | 
tural plant material, a 


9 Dts" 
Sy 
PEs‘ 


Eoch ship represents | million gross tons 


secant eating they do. “Yet,” said he, 
| “I have only seen one woman faint 
} this year.” 

The present writer has not seen a 
woman faint for years, yet when he 
was a boy women and girls were 

| fainting all over Ontario. In a small 
town, if a team of horses ran away 
along the main street, one or two 
women would be almost sure to faint 
in the doorways of the leading dry- 
goods stores. At any gathering at- 


This interesting chart prepared by the Literary Digest explains one important reason why the British Navy tended by excitement a woman 


eettaen | Should be the most formidable in the world. There are more British merchant vessels carrying goods to the com- would be likely to faint and be car- 


on the Atlantic coast of Argyll, sav. 
ing a journey of 70 miles round the 
stormy Mull of Kintyre, and passes 
through scenes of unspoilt loveliness 
There are 15 locks, admitting vessels 
up to 88 feet in length and nine feet 
draught. Traffic is light, the canal 
being chiefly used. by fishing vessels 
and yacht—for this is the yacht- 
man's “road to the Isles.” 

The Caledonian Canal is perhaps 
the most picturesque waterway in 
Europe. Although sixty miles in 
total length, only 23 miles are man- 


made, the rest being through Loch 
Ness, Loch Oich and Loch Lochy— 
beautiful fresh water lakes flanked 
by the mountainous sides of the 


merce of the world than all the other important nations of the world put together. As the world’s No. 1 owner, ried tenderly to one side for recov- 


of seagoing ships, Great Britain must also have a No. 1 fleet to protect those vessels, and it is interesting to| ery. 
note 


amount of quality must be sacrificed 
for hardiness. For this reason, it is 
not always possible to grow suc- 


At a funeral there would be 


that the Mother Country also accounted for 43 per cent. of the world's shipbuilding in 1936. faintings. 


cessfully the common flowering | 
shrubs. Reent introductions of new | 
species from different parts of the 
world have, however, provided a list| 
of adaptable shrubs which range in) 
height from six inches to twenty) 
feet. In fact, hardy shrubs are now. 
available which will suit the require- 
ments of the great majority of peo-| 
ple. 

All but the very hafdiest need the) 
protection of a windbreak in order 
to suceeed, For this reason it is un-| 
' wise under open prairie conditions to, 
attempt much ornamental planting | 
until protection has ‘been onanianes. | 
Early spring planting on land that | 


older, 
The following is a brief list of the 
hardiest shrubs suited to South 


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ey 


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| 


Siberian Almond deserves a place 
in, all ornamental plantings. It is) 
extremely hardy and produces an 
abundance of pink, plum blossoms in 
early spring. . 
. Siberian Crab is a tall growing 
shrub which can be used effectively 
where space is not limited. In full 


lists and additional 
be obtained by writing to the nearest 


Agricultural College or Experimental 
Nest With Two Rooms 

The oven-bird of South America 
has a nest which often measures a 
ed by a partition which extends from | 


&@ few inches of the back. The eggs 
are laid in the inner room. 


A good-sized, healthy elephant in 
the Philadelphia zoo has a daily 


| Vermont native, who fashioned his 
| first steel plow from a broken saw 


. tidenanais 

Was Made In Mlinois From A Broken 
Saw Blade 

The plow is an old tool—one of the 
oldest. It antedates history. Yet it 
is all but within the lifetime of John 
Ogborne, a champion English plow- 
man who died at ninety the other 
day, that most improvements in it 
have been made. 

When John Ogborne began plow- 
ing at eleven, and won his first 
award for skill, it is possible, but 
not at all likely, that he used the 
recent invention of John Deere, a 


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His Excellency the Governor-Gen- 
eral Baron Tweedsmuir will be the 
guest at an old-fashioned western 


portunity of meeting the governor- 
general personally. 
China Owns Little Radium 
China is the richer in radium by 
510 milligrams received by the Sino- 
Belgian Radium Institute, which now 


" Qie ben Ta foe 


Another point is that women do 
not cry as much as they once did. 
If a man and his wife had a dispute 


Little Peculiarities That Denote A) Whether You Answer These Ques-|‘* Woman would win by bursting 


: A woman correspondent, who is) 
groping in his pocket for the front evidently a shrewd observer, puts the 
door key while still half a block following questions, which, she says, 
away on @ frosty night, while if the distinguish the female from the mere 


How do you light a match from 
@ box of matches? 


an audience by a flowery and flatter- 


- 
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g 


Hi 
i 


egledl 


iH 


for the Service of Youth of the Em-| An engineer one day received a 
pire in Westminster Abbey, May 19. note from @ farmer, asking him to 
The Archbishop of Canterbury will whistle long and loud as he passed 
Preach, It is expected Roman his farm, in the hope the sound 
Catholic students will attend a ser-| wold lift the locusts. The engineer 
vice at the same time in Westmingter| complied. The locusts took wing, 
cathedral. only to settle in a railway cut up the 
New Zealand's representation will line and delay the train for several 
include @ boys’ cricket team, which hours as @ result of wheels slipping. 


 $IT-DOWN 
STRIKER 


“IT CAN'T BE IGNORED" 
~The Portland Evening Express. 


| Te boar tears. Perhaps, owing to the 


advancement in education, they can 
win domestic disputes 

without resorting to tears. Be that 
as it may, the female of the species 
does not faint, does not cry, does 
not blush as she formerly did.—Tor- 
onto Star. 


mittee in Saskatoon, The malsters 


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ile 


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January at $47,298 were considerably 
large than the imports at $33,746. 


land bought the large amount of 
$66,078, while Newfoundland, Argen- 
tine, France and Norway were other 
large purchasers. 

As regards our imports of leather 
boots and shoes we got men's wear 
mainly from the United Kingdom at 
$21,217 and ladies’ wear at §7,723 
from the United States. —Dominion 
Bureau of Statistics. 


Known throughout Japan as the 
largest family, the sixty-seven mem. 
bers of the Kobayashi tribe have 
lived together under the same roof 
for many years. Now they plan to 
separate into seven different house- 
holds. 


Postal officials are trying to edu- 
cate the public to lick the envelope 
rather than the stamp. They contend 
that under the former method there 
is greater chance of the stamp atick- 
ing. Incidentally, the envelope 
usually tastes better. 


One dozen ostrich eggs are suffici- 
ent for serving 72 people. 


Poland is expanding its airlines 
with American equipment. 


: 


Great Glen. This unusual type of 
canal stretches between Inverness on 
the North Sea to Fort William at the 
head of a sea loch (Loch Linnhe) 
leading to the Atlantic Ocean and 
leads the traveller past such points 
of interest as the Falls of Foyers, 
Castle Urquhart, the Parallel Roads 
of Glen Roy, Tor Castle, Inverlochy 


scenery. 
In canals, as in many other things, 


low and no red ties are visible, some 
bachelor member is fined for not 
wearing a red tie—the solons must 
have their apples. So far, the law- 
makers have munched 85 bushels of 
apples, 700 oranges and 350 bananas 
this session. 


Good For Two Laughs 

“Isn't a lawsuit involving a patent 
right about the dullest thing imagin- 
able?” said one barrister to another. 

“Not always,” was-the reply. “I 
attended a case not long ago that 
was really funny. A tall lawyer 
named Short was reading a 6,000- 
word document which he called “a 
brief!" 

it ig possible, through use of 
special appliances, for as many as 
aix persons in widely 


places to talk together by telephone. 


The Chinese make gelatin from 
the fried fina of sharks. 


ily 


| 
| 


THE REVIEW, 


— _ 

The New Reign To Save The West | 

Smart International Set No Longer Says Trees Should Be Planted By 
Welcomed By The Court The Tens Of Millions 

A few months of the new reign | Trees must be planted not by the 

have made it clear to Great Britain! millions but by the tens of millions! 


that what its critics termed the jn the drought-stricken areas of Can-| 
smart international set-—the group ada’s prairie west if agriculturists | 
denounced by the Archbishop of are to restore effectively that fertile 
| Canterbury——is no longer welcomed) area to its former place: as the 
by the court. world's granary. . 

The set that was close to BHdward w M. Neal, vice-president of} 
| VIIT. during his brief reign was! western lines, Canadian Pacific Rail- 
called by the archbishop “alien to way, Winnpeg, in his speech as re- 


the best instincts and traditions” of 


REDO 


WORRIED BY PIMPLES 
AND ECZEMA 


Complexion Unblemished 
After Six Weeks of Kruschen 


“For the past two years,” 
woman, “my face was covered with 
hard pimples and red blotches, and I 
also had eczema on my neck and 


ALBERTA 


Always On The Job 


| 


To Ease a 
Headache Fast 


Get Real Quick-Acting, 
Quick-Dissolving 
“ASPIRIN” 


| Work Of Red Cross Cannot Be Too 
Highly Praised 
Dr. A. R. Dafoe, of Callander, re- 
) cently set forth in impressive lan- 
| guage the importance of Red Cross 
| work in the North country. When) 
writes @/ the quintuplets were born, he said, 
Red @ross nurse answered his ap-| 
peal for aid, and this was followed 


fore-arms. I tried lotions, creams) by further nursing assistance. “When| See How 
and ointments, without the slightest c ” doc: | we a 
effect. I was #0 worried. Fortun- pace Rte ylang glee reingge ] ASPIRIN 


“they had no idea of| 


Britain. | 

The same circle that moved around 

King George VI. and Queen Bliza-! 
| beth when, as Duke and Duchess of | 
York, they lived at 145 Piccadilly, 
are now intimates of the royal fam-| 
ily. Most are members of England) 
and Scottish noble families. 

The king has received and talked 
with countless subjects since his 
accession, but the business of king- 
| ship makes difficult the formation of | 


iGIN PILLS 


FOR THE KIDNEYS 


WORLD HAPPENINGS 
BRIEFLY TOLD 


| tific agricultural methods resulted in| Organs are failing to expel from the | 


tiring president to the annual meet-| ately I decided to give Kruschen a 


J 
ling of the @anadan Forestry Aaso- trial, and without any exaggeration, 


" within six weeks my face was with- 

ciation, and W. L. MacTavish, editor out a blemish, and t nave not had a 
of the Winnipeg Evening Tribune, | sign of eczema since. I take Krus- 
who told the association about the | chen regularly every morning, and 
forestration on the prairies, both| Would not be without it."—(Mrs.) J.A 
‘ ly Pimples and eczema are frequently 

stressed this need strongly. due to impurities in the blood— irti- 
Neglect of conservation and scien-|tant poisons which sluggish body 


! 

" whic system. Kruschen Salts help to keep | 
ried oe S aaee coate ay a the body organs functioning normally 
~o — mn Can-' and healthily, thus preventing the 
ada's income by $1,000,000,000, Mr.| accumulation ‘of impurities in the! 


MacTavish said. | blood. 


| public what the Red Cross always is 
doing 


tor continued, | Tablets Work 
the fame that would ultimately rest | 


on that event. They had no idea that 
their efforts would be rewarded But} 
now they will always be known as 
the, organization that helped to keep 
these babies alive.” 

This tribute brings home 


| 


iy the time it bite the 
bottom of the ging it fe 


What 
cinee 
in your 


to the disintegrating. 
happens in thie 
in cases of emergency. All 
through the North country its work 
is carried on. Outpost hospitals now 
dotted over the land have been a 


For QUICK Relief 


Sir Austen Chamberlain, 73, K.G.,| 
died recently in London. As foreign | 
secretary, Sir Austen negotiated the) 
treaty of Locarno. 

Crown Prince Michael of Ru- 
mania will represent his country at) 
the coronation at London, May 12,/ 
it was announced in Bucharest. 

Lord Tweedsmuir, governor-gen-| 
eral, will make an award for the) 
outstanding poem published in the | 
new Canadian Poetry Magazine dur-| 
ing the current year. 

A surplus of £5,000,000 ($25,000,-| 
000) was announced when N. C.) 
Havenga, minister of finance, pre-| 
sented his budget to the South Afri-| 
can house of assembly. | 

President Roosevelt has issued an) 
executive order limiting importation | 
of Canadian red cedar shingles into) 
the United States to 1,048,262 squares 
in the first half of 1937. 

A new auction record for the 24- 

cent United States air mail stamp of 
1918, with the centre inverted, was 
made when an unused specimen sold 
for $3,200 at a sale here. 
I Finance Minister Dunning an- 
nounced that 808 loans bad been 
made under the Dominion Housing 
Act up to Feb. 28 for a total amount 
of $5,692,842. 

The United States state depart- 
ment announced it would issue pass- 
ports to bona fide medical and medi- 
cal relief missions wishing to go 
Spain. : 

The British government will not 
pay an allowance to the Duke of) 
Windsor, presentation of King 
George VI.'s civil list message’ dis- 
closed, Instead, the Royal Family, | 
from its own pocket, will make an 
allowance to former King Edward 
vu. 


Heavy Insurance Carried 
Gross Insurance In Canada Placed 
At $6,431,411,000 

Gross insurance in force in Canada 
on Dec, 831, 1935, was $6,481,411,000, 
in which year $200,157,567 in pre- 
miums was paid, $235,838,748 worth 
of insurance lapsed and $299,657,988 
was surrendered, according to a re- 
turn tabled in the House of Com- 
mons by Finance Minister C. A. Dun- 


personal friendships. Depression, debt and drought have| 
Probably his closest friend now is) brought the west to its knees, he| 
Wing-Commander Sir Louis Greig,| said, urging steps to check “creep- 


|. 


If you suffer from headaches what 
you want is quick relief, 

“Aspirin” tablets give quick te- 
lief, for one reason, because they 
dissolve or disintegrate almost in- 


| boon to the settlers in sparsely set- 
| tled districts, and their nurses are at 
| all times prepared to tramp long dis-| 
| tances to carry to sufferers the bene-| 


Gardening | 


The seed catalogue is a thoroughly 
reliable guide for any gardener. It) 
is illustrated with actual photo-| 
|graphs Those catalogues put out) 
|by the large firms contain much 
|more than a mere mention of the 
many flowers and vegetables avail- 
lable in Canada. They specify im- 
rtant points, such as time of plant- | 


gentleman usher at the court, at ing desert conditions” which left 900 
whose home His Majesty stayed as! square miles of worthless soil in 
an undergraduate at Cambridge Uni-| their wake. 

versity. With Sir Louis, the king! 
once entered the all-England tennis | 
championships at Wimbledon in pur- 
suit of his favorite sport. Now the 
Buckingham palace hard courts are 


| 
| 


Expedition To Arctic 
Sir Hubert Wilkins Says Crocker 


Land Should Be Canadian 


{ o 

» ning prepared for use of His Ma-| Territory  resmrance or lack of re 08 

jesty. Sir Hubert Wilkins, famous Arctic’ to frost, height, color, season of 
Another friend, who also has 


explorer, visited Ottawa to tell direc- | Booming, whether scented, ond also 
Canad Geo the sui yo ower for cut- 

oe : a Coaaetna | ting purposes. All of these points 

| Society his plans’ for a eu © | should be taken into considerat 

| expedition to the north pole and to| planning a real 

|} ask them to associate their society) state, as only wi such knowledge 

| with the project. can a comprehensive and practical 


| acheme be worked out. 
The submarine will be built on the) For instance, ittie planta must not 


| 

| River Thames, Sir Hubert said, and) he hidden by tall t and there 

will leave in May, 1938, for Spitz-| should be as ny) b oe 

bergen to take on supplies. | garden as possi from early June 
“We will start under the ice about/ 0": The most satisfactory planting, 


os | also, will give plenty of material for 

200 miles north of Spitzbergen,” he uets and there should be some 

stated, “and will have about 2,000 plants noted for nef egy A good 
eres Discov | miles to travel, 25 per cent. of which flower garden is sim’ to a 

ee eee probably be in free water,” | Mbrary. - It will reflect the individual 


f f the owner, and there 
The interest in discovered treasure! After crossing the north “pole the | Pill be somet ‘0 


known the king since his youth, is 
Rear-Admiral Sir Basil Brooke, one 
of the four grooms-in-waiting and 
scheduled to be appointed treasurer 
to the queen. Sir Basil instructed 
both Edward VIII. and George VI. in 
the arts of seamanship when they 
were cadets at the Royal Naval col- 
lege at Osborne on the Isle of Wight. 


Treasure Trove 


|have brouhgt hospitalization within 


| for reciprocal 
connection with the proposed joint 
trans-Atlantic 
| American Airways and Imperial Air- 


rnd i head @ | will be something to fit every occa- 
ex tion wou e or sion. 
never flags and there is nothing more | rg vedi sergio nr ned With literally th ata 
enticing than “Treasure Island” or) Land.” This teretecs Com-| t#ble varieties and types available 
something of its kind. Mystery and) , wen: “A “| for gardens in nearly any part of 
romance are always lurking in the ™ander Peary's party claimed to Canada, it is a good policy to add 
neighborhood. Athens is experienc- | have discovered on their polar eg | ae a Ba ageenn new and un- 
ing ® thrill at the present time be-| age pe Land exists it will be| This may not be new advice to the 
cause of the adventure of two peas-| er oo bed | gardener whose huge, luscious to- 
ant boys. The,.lads were far up on, Canadian territory,” sald Sir Hubert, matoes take prizes in the Fall Shows, 
Mount Olympus, 6,000 feet above the -“@0d of particular value when north, and whose corn is known about the 
sea level. Chasing a rabbit it sud- Polar flying is established.” j neighborhood for. ite sweetness, but 
to those ordinary. amateurs who 

denly disappeared into a hole, The! | grow a pea, bean, corn and tomato. 
boys followed the rabbit and to their LITTLE GIRLS WILL TAKE PRIDE garden, with no variety from 
surprise, after pulling aside some 
bushes, found themselves at the en- 
trance to a cave. Digging their way 
in they found themselves in a long 
underground passage divided into 
chambers. 

The floor was made of large flags. 
At the extreme end they found two 
chambers fastened by heavy iron 


doors which they were unable to! 


budge. In an open chamber they 
found a marble statue of a man 
broken in two at the waist; three 
heavy locked metal boxes and num- 
bers of metal plates; four ancient 
helmets in gold; a big imarble table 
and chairs. In another chamber they 
found a marble roe-buck and stag; a 
marble statue of a man with a stick 
in his hand; another of a man strug- 


ning at tlre request of W. A. Tucker) gling with a tiger; numbers of other 


{Lib., Rosthern). 

In the same year death claims paid 
Were $41,070,312, matured endow- 
ments, disability claims, 
values and dividends paid were $116,- 
099,518, and policy loans made were 
$73,439,080. 

Insurance in force reached its 
peak of the last 10 years in 1931, 
when it totalled $6,815,403,854, The 
year 1927 was lowest with §$5,179,-/ 
$79,185. Lapses were highest in 1932) 
‘with §411,222.211. Insurance sur- 
rendered was highest in 1933, at! 
$420,361,747, compared to the 10- 
year low of $103,789,889 in 1927. 

Death claims were highest in 1932,/ 
at $45,384,243. Loans were highest! 
in the same year at $124,982,910. 


| 


Statues and other ancient relics, 
An expedition is now being set on 
foot to explore and seek what. lies 


surrender behind the great iron doors,— Halifax 


Chronicle. 


Fooled Old Man River 


Pittsburg Department Store Was 
Prepared For Big Flood 
Pittsburgh's big downtown depart- 
ment store, Joseph Horne Co,, which 
the rap for about $1,500,000 
flood damage in 1936, was all set this 
time, even if the flood did decide to 
g° away from the door. Spectators 
who were around the neighborhood 
when the 1987 water came up the 


IN THIS CUTE PANTIE FROCK! j 
By Anne Adams 


| @ wholly peaceful purpose. 


to re. , it should awaken a little 
curlosity. 

There are a few uncommon edibles 
which can be easily grown, and 
variety adds interest to 

: Léek-a fine onion-like 

vorer for soups and stews; mar- 

row-—delicious when sliced and fried; 

chicory or French endive—-for winter 

salads; salsify or oyster ta 
reot with a di 


istinctive flavor which 
can be left in the ground over win- 


Non-Magnetic Vessel Being Built By 
British Admiralties 

Amid all the excitement about 
naval defence the Admiralty is quiet- 
ly constructing at least one ship with 
In the 
secluded estuary of the Dart work is 
proceeding on the non-magnetic ship 
Research, which is to serve as a 
check on compass errors due to 
magnetism. 

She ts one of the few all-wooden 
ships now being built in the world.) 
The constructors are not allowed to, 
use more than 600 pounds of iron in 
the whole of the construction, and 
most of the other metal that will be 
built into her will be non-magnetic, 
The ship is to make magnetic ob- 
servations at sea, and these will be 
used to provide accurate forecasts of | 
the correction to be applied to mag-| 
netic compasses in all ships. 

Work of this kind used to be) 
done by the ship piovided by the! 


Columbia.” 


| Street saw what happened: ‘“Alumi- 
| pum bulkheads were pushed up be- 
; hind the glass in 16 big windows and 


Officer (to colored driver who has 


| 
i 


Carnegie Institution at Washington | 
but when she was lost by fire seven 


been whipping his horse): “Don't 
whip him, man—talk to him.” 
Driver (to horse by way of open- 


} 


years ago the institution did not re-| 
Little girls will take vast pride in| place her. Then in 1935 the Ad-| 
this adorable Anne Adams pantie! miraity undertook to take over the| 


bolted tight, others clamped shut 
behind the doors, In an hour and 40 


minutes, the store was watertight 12 5 , 
ing conversation): “Ah comes from | feet above the street Sachncant faneaios on — Rn = Mad | work, and the Research is to be 8 
N'Awleans. Wheah does you-all| Week. ‘Specially suited to youthful play Charge on the Navy Estimates. The 
come from?” eee ee hours, or schooldays is Pattern 4340) ship, however, will not rank as 
—— Flying over the Bay of Naples, ae ee ee Bh waguagl bast i hs aneue aa 
We ‘have gone a long way from the; an alr pilot turned to his observer make up in a jiffy. At “Two” to 2 %-5- Royal Research Ship.—-| 
crude and violent methods of early’ and said: “Have you heard that, “Ten”, fashionable touches are im-| Manchester Guandian. 
labor agitators. Nowadays, when he phrase ‘See Naples and Die’ ?” portant, and any kiddie will be 24 
wants to call a strike, a labor leader| “Yes,” said the observer. Larilied with hes ow Suttering cape-| First Student—I wonder how old 
lets, wide action pleas, becoming 


simply says: “Gentlemen, be seated.” 


HOW TO OVERCOME 


yoke (accented by a large, colorfyi| the Latin professor is? 
utton) and simple neckline. The Second Ditto--Quite old, I imagine 


fabric you choose is most important, | They say he used to teach Caesar 
too, from a standpoint of wearability | 


“Well,” said the pilot, “take a good 
look--the propeller's came off." 


“Man, ye dinna ken what torture’ 


| and colorfulmess: such cottons as. 
ITCHING PILES is.” | bright percale, gingham, o: dimity British motorists have paid, in| 
“Well, what is it?” | wee, Be ane coe license fees, fines, etc., no less than| 
tf you are annoyed with itching piles or| “I suffered it yesterday when the, Pattern 0 is available in sizes) ¢968125,000 into the Road Fund! 
tal . @0 pot lect the ! Pe |2, 4,6, B and 10. Size 6 takes 2% | i 
rectal soreness, 40. a Any hci. barber had my mouth fu’ o lather | yarde 86 inch fabric. Tnatreten | since 1931, 
— (2 — pA} oe and I sat watching the anap boy Et'e) Hep-by-step sewing instructions in- ——_ aap 
be scoured wt once. For thle purpose get from| @ Customer my umbrella. / : Walls 50 feet deep and eight feet 
any augsiat, 6 of and uses! reste Sa Z | Send twenty cents (20c) in coin or i Y t me Bat ; 
yy formula, which is ised tn- jstamp& (coin preferred) for thig| ‘Hick enclose the 50 vaults of the 
ternally, auickly relieves the itching and sore-| British shipyards are busier than! anne Adams pattern. “Write plainly | Bank of England. 
pees Sod aids ip healing the sore, tender ince 1929 plainly ; 
apots. Hemrold is & physician's prescription @t any time since . ' Size, Name, Address and Style Num- : Lewi 
ead is highly recommended. It is easy to use ———— ber, and send order to the Anne < : 
and it seems the height of folly — —e ceeues bau tnd Adams Pattern Dept., Winnipeg Sumatra is said to have the great-| 
Bud u's plensaut to uae maj’ be ‘had’ ai wht rainbows have been seen ati Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot | est Variety of animal and vegetdbie | 
cb 6 reascbabie cost. : one time. 2195 Ave. E., Winnipeg. life of any place in the world. 
r. 4 
i . eee 


stantly they touch moisture. (Note 
illustration above.) 

_ Hence—when you take an “Aspi- 
rin” tablet it starts to dissolve al- 
most as quickly as you swallow it. 
And thus is ready to start working 
almost instantly . . . headaches, 
neuralgia and neuritis pains start 
easing almost at once. 

@ “Aspirin” tablets are made in 
Canada. “Aspirin” is the registered 
trade-mark of the Bayer Company 
Limited, of Windsor, Ontario. Loob 
for the name Bayer in the form of « 
cross on every tablet. 

Try it.\You’ll say it’s marvelous 


fit of medical attention. These units 


reached of thousands of isolated set- 
tlers.--Hamilton Spectator. . 


Trans-Atlantic Airways 
Negotiations Between Britain And 
U.S. Reach Deadlock 
Negotiations between the United 
States and Great Britain providing 
aviation services in 


operation by Pan- 


ways of Great Britain have reached 
a deadlock says a special Washing- Demand 
ton despatch to the New York Times.| @nd Get— 


The despatch continues: 

_ The chief bone of contention, it 
was learned, is a difference of opin- | 
jon between the Canadian authorities | 
and the United States department of | 
commerce as to whether New York! 
or Montreal shall be the trans-At-| 


months. Sorepteat, Few People Understand Heavy Bur- 
| den Canada’s Parliament Carries 
If any one wants an answer to 
that famous question, “What does 
, the Government do with our taxes?” 
ptembe ae “ eS they have but to watch the news 
omners “anadian-charte from Parliament. Shortly after the 
waterfront organizations working House opened the main estimates 
British Columbia lower coast ports brought down, totalled $410,000,000. 
maton oc ay ‘warren Fewer, Special supplementary estimates 
“came al , Which totalled $96,000,- 
employee relations in the province! 990, od tke supplementary 
and opposed to incursion of their ter-| mates about $13,000,000, 
ritory by foreign chartered unions. What it means is this: That this 
In a letter to Prime Minister coming fiscal year Mr. Dunning will 
Mackenzie King and the Dominion) need over half a billion dollars to 
department of labor seven longshore/ tae care of all the Government's 
groups asked that outside unions be! needs; of ordinary and capital ex- 
not allowed to interfere with “the | penditures, the National Railways, 
present stable and satisfactory con-| direct unemployment relief, drought 
ditions of the industry in | Telief, other works and projects for 
relief. About $10,000,000 every week. 
: oe It takes a lot of taxes. 
ae See ee _. The truth is that government in 
by King George V. ing used Canada has become big business— 
manufacture of artists’ canvasses.| the biggest business we have. The 
Tt provides a long fibre of a quality! pity is that so many don’t seem to 
rivalling flax grown in France, Bel-| realize this; go on asking for this re- 
gium and Holand. | form and that regulation as though 
* : - the Government had a Lake Shore 
The Pacific coast line of the Unitea| mine behind the Library on Parlia- 
States is 1,366 miles long. ment Hill.Ottawa Journal. 


ASPIRIN.::. 


Administration Costs 
Sted With Conon 
Waterfront Grounientieta Op- 
posed To Foreign Unions 


:) 
‘ 


BAC 


Whole armies of Celts used to 
march unclad into battle. 


Phoenix, Ariz, hag an ordinance 
requiring licenses for bicycles. 


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menia: sores 


ieieaiemeateetiaiinnetelaine cnt atieeaie ate 


esti- 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFE, ALBERTA 


| 
| homesick for the earthen floor of a 
sod cabin, with its friendly smell of 
burning turf and the sour butter! 


When. 


THE 
YELLOW [iii seins sot oan serine ot 


day work like: and I ran about the 


| 
~ vears has some ar-cut impress 


sior wvwinted at th : 0 
> s A Story of the Irish on the Ph . - pla . oS 
* , : tende nscarred membranes of the 
~— Canedian Countryside 
‘\ ~ bra and they remain distinct and 


By PATRICK SLATER vivid to the 


1 of his days I got 


' Ry atrangement with Thomas id jobs myself, splitting kindling 
WATCH YOUR YEAST! es oe od dcing Senved (a as een 


Mi ‘ Kitty O'Shea, who lived in 

. cia / . ‘in CHAPTER 1.--Continued @ ifttle tradi teens. Where fee 
Royal is always saves Lane tio ik. Shs wns Sole 
= x ‘ ne t Can - ¢ se women! rid faced little bodw with etiver 
dependable nt ied ft ffer and endure 8 always in her pocket: and she had 
the folh eut homesteads on fashionable ladies lodging with her 
hillsides.-but there was On fine ifternoons Paddy Casey 


a touch of hope thrown in. And would come round with his open car 
SPOILED where there is hope, there is joy.| riage and spanking pair Mistress 
One of the finest things Canada ever’ Kitty O'Shea and her stylish guests 
DOUGH/ 1 wes: 
° 
SHOULD HAVE Their tongues may have been tart | understand the business at the time; 
USED ROYAL | at times but they wore their! but no doubt my friend Kitty wanted) 


knuckles to the bone in the service) other folk to know the sort of house | 
of their love. The Scottish Presby-| she was running 


put a kindly twinkle into; were driven slowly) up and down 
the blue-grey eyes of these proud,| King Street to see the sights and 
poverty-stricken Irishwomen take the air. Of course, I did not} 


terlans may have been the salt of In 1847, there was plenty going on 
the @arth in Upper Canada; but the| in Toronto to fill a young Iad’s mind 
Irish women gave it sweetness and| and keep his face agape. We had 
| light These mothers of Methodist; come from drippy Dopegal where, in 
families were quiet, tidy, capable/the little pockets and quarter-ac re| 


EVEREADY 
AIR CELL VEREADys 


women; dnd it was a pleasure to patches, “the pratties grow so small 
watch one of them making ready an they have to eat them skins and) 


evening meal, They were whole-| 4ll.” Toronto seemed to me a stir. | "A" BATTERY 
some-minded because they were ring, big town; and things were in| 
home lovers and were busy home-|4 constant commotion. Then, too,| 
making And among women, it is| there were the public hangings. Ad- Ne re-charging necessary 


with this modern battery — 
proven by the test of time. 
Connect Air Cell te yeur 
. fadle and your “A” power ts 


the home-keeping hearts that are venture bunted into a fellow round 
happiest. The mother of a family; @My corner; and there was lots to) 
was proud of her station as such; ¢at 

and, as a result, she was content to} (To Be Continued) 

relax and drift quietly into the 


charges —therefore true 
| matron class. Her Irish eyes were “Grey Of Fallodon” | coontny? 
smiling One was not startled those 


days by seeing the worn eyes of an| Biography Of Britain's Foreign Seo-| 
| old woman looking out from a face) retary During Fateful War Years 
|; made up to recall a youth that had A man who despised politics, labor- 
,| fled. Has not every age of a woman's) ed unremittingly to keep Britain out 


Every cake of Royal 


¢ 4s sealed in an 


; . o ; ; 

cr * m “t | life a natural beauty of its own? |of war, and personified in an excep- | 

. ay -tight wrappe) The bodiés of these Irish women) tional degree the qualities of the) 
a ‘ " / | may have been’ stiff-necked with a@/ Englishman at his best—such is the} 
ore It Stays fresh! curious family pride that had noth-| tribute paid to Viscount Grey by! 
/ | 


r 


EVEREADY 
Super 
Layerbilt 


. - ing much to justify it; but that very| Professor G. M. Trevelyan in his! ? 
FOU. can’t make _successful | pride fortified their unconquerable| pjography of Britain's foreign secre- 
: bread with weak yeast. | wins and helped to keep their men-| tary during the fateful years from| 
Your yeast must be full strength | ¢41, reapectable. ‘There was’ con-]1908-14. ’ 


and pure if yoy “iy wana 3 pb | stant in their hearts a depth of love| In his intimate biography, “Grey]| 
appetizing--sweet-Havoured and | ang joyalty; and Hke my old yellow! of Fallodon", the- author has re- 
light in texture. 


| 
sei A | briar, it burst into bloom at times. counted faithfully the historic part 
That’s why seven out of 8 | : 


Me Gays, 


| ‘ “pe 
: poet at vad | . for her price is above rubies, | his subject played in the destiny of B BATTERY 
= Canadian housewives today insist She seeketh wool and flax and| his country 
foyal whe rb wit | worke' as w = ; | 
on R Ny v hen they bake ith a worketh willingly with her hands. . ‘| Prof Trevelyan declared Grey] ~~ the only “8” bat 
dry yeast. Every cake of Royal She stretched forth her hands to| . tery built in layers — provides 1/3 
comes sealed in an air tight the poor; yea, she reacheth forth her | @¥er ceased to analyze his actions) mere power th 4 coll bat 
wrapper the only dry yeast hand to the needy... . which resulted in Britain's entry into| feries ef equal pay BE — 
that nada te special prote cham She looketh well to the ways of|the Great War, During the rest of! lewer cest. Ask fer fversady 
S Cus Sf protec * |her household, and eateth not the! his life his sad mind perpetually re- Super-Layerbilt by name! 

It stays fresh and pure for | bread of idleness. , 


months. Favor is deceitful and beauty is|Verted to the question, trying It) 
For 50 years, Royal has stood | vain; but a woman that feareth. the | again and again from every side, on) 
ov years, ys as s » . 


ate | Lord, she shall be praised sleepless nights and blind, solitary'| 
for reliability . . . unfailing good | days, To the end he could not think 


results. Don't trust your bread- 


The words of King Lemuel, 


READY | 


baking to inferior brands of yeast. CHAPTER II | what more he could have done to} 
Be sure to ask for Royal. F | - | Prevent the avalanche of war, ced . 
‘ It was early in the spring of 1847| author says. i 


Send for FREE Booklet! 


To get uniform re- 
sults in bread-bak~- 
ing, it is important 
to keep the sponge 
at anevent ener 


that I first got to know that young) 
girls family, as I played around the | 
Tavern Tyrone at Toronto, It is a) 
long journey back, indeed, from life's} 


During the early days of the war) 
the foreign secretary would go out) 
of his way to avoid a company of | 
recruits marching down a street 


A B 


RADIO 


BATTERIES 


. / . 
fuse, The “heyai | end to the little boy at the starting| packed with cheering throngs The) CANADIAN NATIONAL CARBON eo. LIMITED 
Yeust Bake ” 1 of it | sight cut him to the heart. i 


meeeiee My family were of the poor Irish. He once said to Lord Robert) 


Cough Send cou. | A sailing vessel, returning to Que-| Cecil: “I used to hope that I was | _ . 
the , giving 23 | bec for timiber, that, year called. at| meant to keep the country out of) ; ae — . 
tested sectpen fo an Irish port to load its decks, as! war, But perhaps my real business Created Winning Design Early Egyptian Ruler 
a 2 *, bume | cheap cargo, with famished and| was to bring her into it unitedly.” - -— . 
wasted emigrants on their wild flight; The biographer replies sharply to) Woman Architect Will Decorate Kond Discovery Of Bedy By Archaeologist 
from the famine and the plague.| Lloyd George's criticism of Grey re-| Street For Coronation | Shows He Was Beheaded 
Woe’s me! Unspeakable were the| garding the invasion of Belgium. In| 4 young woman, whose hobby is| The first body of a noble belonging a good soldier of Jesus Christ. 
| miseries of that long, tempest-tossed | his memairs Lloyd George contends architecture, stood before 300 pro-|*? the time of the first dynasty of 9 wi otny ong, 
voyage in a filthy, fever-stricken|that at any stage Grey could have! fegsional architects in London—and| @8¥Pt as been discovered by a)” 
|ship, Half its human cargo were! secured substantial unanimity in the | ¢riticized their work. ‘She was Mra,| YOU" British archaeologist, Walter) Where our Captain bids us go, 
buried at séa; and as the vessel sail-| cabinet respecting Belgium, and that! Acland, wife of the M.P. for Barn-| ™™°ry — pad — ~~, 
ed past Father's Point, the waters! “had he warned Germany in time of | staple. She created the winning de-| Mr. Emery found it while excavat- shiela.” : . 
| 9f the St. Lawrence for miles be-| the point at which Britain would de-| sign for the decoration of Bond | ing at Sakkara, near the pyramid of| (yooses too the battle-field 
hind were strewn with bedding toss-| clare war the issue would have been) street, known to the world as the| 2°#¢F. It has been identified as that; On which we fight the foe 
ed overboard by sailors making the) different.” | street in a contest open to all archi-| of Sabu, governor of the province 
————— | eck ship-shape for port. Asa flat; In: Prof. Trevelyan's view, Lloyd) tects in the country j under King Azab, fifth ruler of the 
Worked Too Well | #cow was being towed slowly up the| George here “displays more than his! Mrs. Acland told the architects are dynasty - 
pa * % | river near Prescott, my poor father| usual temerity.” The author says|that Bond street, known to the) 7¢ body, decapitated by ancient) 
hip ovat! og bs raping was stricken down. He went under! the difficulty was the greater because! world as the “street of quality,” was | vebinera, wag raped lying in the 
—- . | shallow earth quickly without bene-| Lloyd George himself was a neutral-| architecturally appalling, and that burial pit in the centre of a tomb/ 
® man in a small way of business in): of clergy. My mother wailed/ist, Grey's colleagues are cited as/ her Coronation scheme was intended | which dates back to approximately 
4 anal) town. _,,| after the manner of Irish women,| agreeing the cabinet would not have|to cover up its faults. 8,200 B.C 
PR, rng Nickle ag advertisin’,” and counted’ héer silver. It was a| permitted a threat about Belgium} Her audience of men showed their| Beside the body was 4 unique vase 
- handful.of coppers she had, with a/ earlier than the foreign secretary | agreement by cheering he: resembling the steering wheel of a 


Halifax, Montreal, TORONTO, Winnipeg, Vancouver . 


Little Helps For This Week 


Thou therefore endure hardness as 


Standard Brands Ltd., 
Praser Ave. & Liberty 5t., 
Terente 2, Ont. 

Please send me the free Royal 
Yeast Bake Book. 


Oa 


Address —.. 


Towa __. ————— 


We cannot be surfer of anything 
than this: that if we cannot sanctify 
our present lot we could sanctify no 
other. Our heaven and our Almighty 
Father are there, or nowhere. The 
obstructions of our lot are given us 
to fight away its gloom, its mys- 
teries are for our worship, and its 
temptations for our faith. Soldiers 
of the cross, it is not for us, but for 


“But why are you against it?” 


- | - 

Mk AenN iets otek pb ta few sixpenny bits and a shilling. A’ made it } Mrs. Acland first wanted to be-| motor car and of about the same our Leader and our Lord, to choose 
wenn iin ahh ; “— sAvertioed sxe steamboat brought the widow Slater “Lioyd George's retrospective crea-| come an architect at the age of 12 mae ; | the field, and it is ours to take the 
aad Ben. 4 a ’ sore and her small son to Toronto. How tion of situations that never existed,| She still “goes to school,” and fre- The vase was shattered when! orion which he assigns and make 

SL ner an e conseg ic 


fortunate it was she had only one/|in order to cast blame on others, is| quently works night and morning, found, but the fragments retrieved i the field of truth and honor 
wuz I wuz so busy I didn't have time | / 


to go fishing the whole season!” | child unworthy of the great part he played drafting plans. Her holidays are | parva the “ps a — poosd ye if it be the field of death 
atitteent Mees | My mother took lodgings with Mr | in the world's affairs,” the author ob-| spent working in architects’ offices gether and sent to the museum a 

; | Michael O'Hogan in a small frame) serves 
|house that still stands, in tottering 


even 


- Cairo ; 
The press, so often accused of be- 


Strange But True ing bought, often wonders why the 


The level of the Yangtse river in 


decay, on the east side of York 
China is 25 feet below normal 


Street a few doors down from 


= Some Scotsmen have real generous 
Noise is a major hazard in modern An umbrella has ribs but no trunk 2 money doesn't arrive 
mpulses Take for example, the ° 


ee | existence, contributing to chronic ill A tree has a trunk but no ribs - - - 
jomgpeoony Street Our living quart- health and premature old age, ac A match bas 0 head ue no fan Scotsman who was attracted by one 
DURING MOTHERHOOD ; os were upmals i 8 small back cording to Dr. Foster Kennedy of A watch has a face but no head of the Giamese twins. S10 sidied up BLINDING HEAD- 
” =“ OMEN | be iroom, which we shared with @ Cornell A rooster has a comb but no hair to the twin who took bie fancy and 
Re < who dread | eee family. She was only & slip A rabbit has hair but no comb. | Whispered: “If you can get away for ACHES VANISH 
motherhood, | of 4 girl, and she was one of them Silk underwear is now compulsory A river has a moiith but no tongue. | ® little while, I'll buy you a drink 
who suffer |black Irish You know what I A whip has a tongue but no mouth Amazed by Immediate Relief 


for both sexes in Germany; this aims 
at releasing the imported cotton for aaa 
other purposes New Zealand expects a record year) 
jim dairy and wool output 
— quemeneem | vefore 


from backache | mean? There was the mop of raven) 
om — -” | hair, the swarthy skin and a touch) 
Ȣ heiped by the a . =a | 
Sse at ie. of down on the lip. Beyond the cruel, 


Pierce's Favor- | desolate ocean, there had been’a) 


Pike's Peak was named after Ze 
bulon Pike, but it was known to 


Fruit-a-tives Gave. No Longer 
Tived, Worn Out, 
fiered agony from blinding head- 


indigestion and chrealc constipa- 
says Mrs. C. Hutton, of Blenheim 


white men as early as 1700, long 


his birth 


! | ney wife’ . 7 “ i 1 Ai 
ite Prescription, | sparkle of fun in her eyes, and the) My wife's quape on the go. / . enetnn tnt lee helen 
Z Read what Mrs. , “So is mine, but she always comes 3 . was amazed by the immediate relief 
= 7* aborts of tongue of the laughing little baggage back." lp ; Of the land area of Great Britain Frult-e tives gave me. My stomach trouble 
234 Superior St, Brantford, Ont, said: | B@d been always on the wag But} 21,268,000 acres are used for grazing ies peqered Sates. _ copees Tae 
. | ne mor 
a ng euperiancy gas piss = fee the poor little Irish girl was fair dis ’ TORTURE io A Minute @,250,000 acres are arable land, and meals. No longer do I feel tired and worn 
In Dr. Picice’s Favorite Prescription. Befove | traught, now, with the outlandish ‘There is no bigger joke on earth | Oy yas relief from the liching of ecresas, biotaba 1950,000 acres are forest lands —. You too, cas Gnd now beak by 
' using this medicine, at such times I couldn't | ways of the crazy, new-world town,| than the one having two legs othleis’s Taal, sation, taches and other tracts of fruits and herbs and act to 
‘ Fest at night and felt too sick be on my y ' igre Dr. Dennis’ oe cyoling, ant etimulate the liver and Mow of bile; cleanse 
feet. 1 bardiy bad strength enough to get | and sore afraid of its streets infest- : Set ee _ io pale & Our ancestors reckoned time by! {ie 'tilmination tract of wastes and 
: a ee ee }ed with protestants and nigger folk. New Zealand foresees a record | oan les. 8 tee mest ibieuse itching i | nights and winters, hence “fort fajrane: tend to preity ine Meet of 2 
ngib to cay on” ay now! She was sick at heart; she was year in automobile sales 2195 a Ask a BD. “by paescnirtion. a hight a contraction of 14 nights ' trlal today. Om sale at all drug stores. 


Plea oO ings 


7h aN 


Medicine Hat 
NOW SHOWING 
Thers., Fri, Set, Apl, ®, 9, 10 
MILLION DOLLAR MUSICAL 
Senja Henie, in 
“One in A Million” 


Adsighe Menyen, jean Hersesit, 


Ned Sparks, The Ritz Brothers 


Mon. Tues., Wed., Api. 12, 13, 14 
Willem Powell, Myrna Ley, in 


“After The Thin Man’ 


Thers., fri., Set Api. 15, 16, 17 

Francis Lederer, Ann Sothern, in 

“My American Wife” 
and William Boyd, in 


“Borderland” 


Mea., Tues., Wed., Api. 19, 20, 21 
DAZZLING MUSICAL 
ELEANOR POWELL, in 
“Born to Dance” 
James Stewart, Virginia Bruce, 
Sid Silvers, Una Merkel, Bub Ebsen 


Sw asi 


hm ehid 


Qiu wiht Suis | 


From $9.50 


* 8 « 686 


Serer eeeveeeeene¢9 


* 


How ls Your Subscription? 


° s* 6 2 6 93 66-6 


344 South Railway St. 


We Are 
CASH BUYERS FOR 


Coyote, Weasel, Skunk 
end Rabbit Skins 


°'¢ 2 2 2 


MOORE’S MID-MONTH SALE 


ae ® Thai 
Felt Base Floor Coveris ‘ZB, 


iiEW Pe ct IELD SUITES For Esstes 


Buites in good wearl; 


id Heer Coma Ma For Now Furniture & | | RECONDIMONEL & GUARANTEED 
New Patterns, S¥¢ & 4% Sq Yd. house Furnishings USED CARS } 
» &d, $1.25 and $1.39 Sq. Yerd of every coscription asd ot | j} 1986 Ford Delux Sedan 
Three Piece } prices that willeppeaite ali |. with ‘Truck 
‘ airy > 2 | t ‘ - 
g Tepestry $58.75 $7°.75 $98.75 You Used aE | W008 Mae heed Mesten Pix 
Spring Lune 9 Lressing Up Tame ehen im Exebonge ==)! 1094 vioveriot 6 Wheel Geden 
New Curtains or Drapes will amarien up that room. Our Used Furniture Dept. Smail Mileage 
A Big Selection at Moderate Prices 1984 2 Ton Ford V 8 Truck 
in Good Shape 


_ J. MOORE & SON 


| will be greatly appreciated 
Renewal of your Subscription Now 


thc all bed lho ee@ 


MONARCH | 


ee eee Mrs Middleton and daughte".|et present the guest of Mrs W 
|* KEETLEY JOHNSON 3 °/itazci, spent a few days in| Hill. 

* For Accident, Fireand °| town visiting Mra A Ellis. .AS 

< Sickness Insurance ° “7 8 Mr, Alex. Maskell has been 
* Trust & Fidelity Bonds * Migs Olive Lund of Medicine |2ppointed a Justice of the Peace 
- 7th Street, Redcliff *Iiat spent last week-end here|hy the provincial government 
@enaneeeeeeeeeeeneee . 


Smart Coais 


Phone 3160 LEVINSON’S, Phone 2160 


OPERATING 
NEW YORK FUR EXCHANGE 


THR REDCLIFF REVIEW  -1ITURSDAY,APRIL 8th 1987 


Th per Pay Day Rush 


For Fieming’s Lovely 


Spring Suits and Coats 


The Largest and Finest Stock of Exclusive 

Models in Medicine Hat, Ready for your 

Selection. Prices Lower Than Ever. 
$9.75 to $35.00 

10 per cent. Discount For Cash 


~ 


JUST ARRIVED 
New Spring Smocks, Wash Dresses, Silk Dresses, 
Hats, Blouses, Skirts, Scarves, Gloves, Trench Coats 


coe, © LEMINGS “Sr 


HAT 


Get Ready for 
Spring Planting 
of Flowers 


We have a Large Assortment 
of Plants for setting out this 
apring. Leave Your Orilers 
Early. Always a Nice Assort- 
ment of | 


House Plants 
AND 
Cut Flowers 


Mills Greenhouse 


Medicine Hat 
Leave Your Orders with —_— —_ = mee emg 
Agnes Maillard on i) Ban ft Fhe Ars 
oo Agent interesting toy Art, Theatre and Music wil! 


Le held from August 2 to 23. 
Local Items 


Mrs Coverdale of Calgary is 


the guest of Miss Alenback, 

e 4.8 Miss June Holland hag been 

e gues, of Mrs A Ellis for the 
past week. 


ig Sros., Ltd. 


INSURASCE 


Mr “Jim” English, a retire’ 
rancher of this district, died in 
the Medicine Hat Hosiptal lasc . 

M. Fred Walker, met with ar 

ccident at Tilley when hir 
*orse fell on him and sprained 
‘is arm, He is now at home 


For the first time in more 
han.seven years, May whext 


651 2nd St. Medicine Hat | ‘vent over the $1.50 a. buchel/ with his parents north of towr. 
Telephone 3554 mark on the Winnipeg exchange a oe 
‘ast Saturday. This yen: the Alberta division 
2-2 Canadian Red Cross Society, | 


‘| Steve Hall, after whom Steve | has decided to holq their annua! 

ville was named, died suddenlv |campaign for funds from the 1st 
to the 15th of May. 
; i 4 _* . . 

; ° BIRTH 

Yeedhm —- On Thursday Ap" 
pussed away last week. Dr-| ‘st, 1937 to Mr and Mrs Robbw. 
ceased who was a district off’. | eedham (nee Francis Rose) + 
al of the UF A, was well ‘iapot, 2 son, Robert Walter. 
known in this vicinity. | 


or ae oH 


Fall and Winter 


Save Your Fuel Bill with 


STORM DOORS, 
AND WINDOWS 


At Keasonable Prices ; 


The Gas City 
Pianing Mill 


vedune Ete 


OST —- In Redeliff a two and a 
half gold piece made into a ring 
A very promising program i | with initals G B on front, Val: 
ssured for the Major Boles an | ‘ved as u keep sake. Reward if 
ertainment in the Littl Thea- returned. Mrs Fred Bailey, 

tre tonight under the aucpices ee, ee 

w the local Legion. A ‘ong list _ : . 

+S eptetes bone been made whic: SA! = — 4 saline Wonk: 
will guarantee lots of fun, am- 


LOOK AT YOUR LABED 


_-. /. 2. 2 2 2s ee eS ee 


OF MEN’S AND 
LADIES’ WEAR 


Medicine Hat, Alte. 


lary rocking chair, 1 brass be, Every Garment at 
Ww f lin N 1 brown bed, spring 1 . . 
and Send Hand Clothes str, ores 14 Special Prices 


© ¢ 2 ¢ 2 2-232" '"2 


VISIT THE LESK’S 
FURNITURE STORE 


~ 1980 Oldsmobile Coach 
Completely Overhauled 


Near dedcine Hat ‘erage |} » Several Low Priced Cars 


* | 00 and up 
Furniture Store CENTRAL GARAGE ' 
Third 6t Medicine Hat | Medicine Hat 


i lal 


BARGAINS 


For Friday, Saturday and Monday 


WORK SHOES Men's Solid Leather Work Shoes, pl4in toe 
half rubber heel, triple stitching leather sole - $1.98 


WORK SHIRTS to make room for our new stock: we are 
offering all broken lines, reg. $1.25 to $1.75 lines at 95e 


Children’s Shoes Sand and Brown Elk Scuffers in boys and 
girls, just the thing for school, hard wear, all sizes, 95e 


LADIES’ DRESSES Dozens to choose from, all neatly made 
in & splendid sesortment of prints, sizes 14 to 46 9c 


MILLINERY Ladies’ New Spring Millinery in the Latest 
Styles. Make your selection now. 


Be Sure to See Our 50c Table 


THE HICKS TRADING CO. 


New Spring Goods 


Women’s Slips 


In the Much Wanted Angelekin, with pretty lace 
insertion; Tearose and White, All sizes at 


Men’s Oxfords 
Black Calf Oxfords with Wing Tip Welt, Leather Sole, Rubber 


Heel, medium weight, sizes 6 to 10, $3. 25 


A Good Buy at 


$1.00 


Boys’ Pants 


Try a Pairof these Good Wearing Union Tweed Pants in 


Brown or Grey Shades; Belt Loops and Cuff 
Bottome, sizes 6 to 16, Special : $2. 00 


Holeprocf Hose 


There must 


59c 


More people are wearing Holeproof Every Day 
be a reason, Seemless Foshioned, Genuine Crepe 
~ Twist from tve to top, sizes 8} to 10, Specially Priced 


The LePage Store 


Third St., Medicine Hat 


co 


ie 


- $1.69 


- 10¢ 'SERVETTES 2 pkts. for 25¢ 
10c | JELIT JELLIE 6 pkts. 25¢ 
SODAS 8 Box for - - 39¢ 
SNAP CLEANSER - - b5c 
CARROTS Large bunches 8c 
“GRAPE FRUIT 


Apples, Per Case - 


CUCUMBERS = Each 
Morrowfat Peas, Pkt. 


RED ROSE COFFEE 
Vacuam Packed, Tin ~- 37¢ 


ORANGE MARMALADE 
Hunters, homemade style 15c 


TOILET. ROLLS 
4 oz. roils, . 8 for 25c| Large size, - 4 for 26e 
CATSUP DATES -- 3 pounds for 25c 
Clark's, 2 Bottlesfor - 35c EGGS, FRESH 
; POTATOES Grade A - 2 doz. for 45c 
Netted macheanesed per sack $1.96] Grade B - - 2 doz. for 89 


Malt it Extract, Peerless, .r'Sarx per tin, 99¢ 
THE S. E. GUST STORES 


PHONE 248 FREE DELIVERY. 


Now’s The Time to Have | 


Pe frm fe nw tne yy 


Your Car Reconditioned 


For Trouble Free Transportation 
We Carry a Complete Stock of the 
Necessary Repair Parts 
anc All Work is Conducted by 
Experienced Mechanics 


Tire Specials 
! 450-20 Heavy Duty 6 ply Tue $ 9.50 
500-19 4875 
s-18 “« “ 64325 


f BENY & SON, Meticine Hat 


It Pays to Advertise in The Review 


ALL OUR ADVERTISERS SAY $0